Hillary Clinton by Dwayne Epstein
by Dwayne Epstein
© 2010 Gale, Cengage Learning ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. No part of th...
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Hillary Clinton by Dwayne Epstein
by Dwayne Epstein
© 2010 Gale, Cengage Learning ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. No part of this work covered by the copyright herein may be reproduced, transmitted, stored, or used in any form or by any means graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including but not limited to photocopying, recording, scanning, digitizing, taping, Web distribution, information networks, or information storage and retrieval systems, except as permitted under Section 107 or 108 of the 1976 United States Copyright Act, without the prior written permission of the publisher. Every effort has been made to trace the owners of copyrighted material.
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA Epstein, Dwayne, 1960– Hillary Clinton / by Dwayne Epstein. p. cm. -- (People in the news) Originally published: 2008. With an additional chapter. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-1-4205-0268-8 (hardcover) 1. Clinton, Hillary Rodham--Juvenile literature. 2. Presidents’ spouses-United States--Biography--Juvenile literature. 3. Legislators--United States--Biography--Juvenile literature. 4. United States. Congress. Senate--Biography--Juvenile literature. 5. Women cabinet officers-United States--Biography--Juvenile literature. 6. Cabinet officers--United States--Biography--Juvenile literature. 7. Presidential candidates--United States--Biography--Juvenile literature. I. Title. E887.C55E67 2010 328.73092--dc22 [B] 2009031201 Lucent Books 27500 Drake Rd. Farmington Hills, MI 48331 ISBN-13: 978-1-4205-0268-8 ISBN-10: 1-4205-0268-9
Printed in the United States of America 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 13 12 11 10 09
Conte nts Foreword
4
Introduction Making the Impossible Possible
6
Chapter 1 In Her Time
9
Chapter 2 “Billary”
22
Chapter 3 From State House to White House
35
Chapter 4 Hillaryland
47
Chapter 5 Casting Her Own Shadow
63
Chapter 6 A Presidential Race Like No Other
77
Chapter 7 Madam Secretary
92
Notes
109
Important Dates
114
For More Information
117
Index
123
Picture Credits
127
About the Author
128
Foreword
F
ame and celebrity are alluring. People are drawn to those who walk in fame’s spotlight, whether they are known for great accomplishments or for notorious deeds. The lives of the famous pique public interest and attract attention, perhaps because their experiences seem in some ways so different from, yet in other ways so similar to, our own. Newspapers, magazines, and television regularly capitalize on this fascination with celebrity by running profiles of famous people. For example, television programs such as Entertainment Tonight devote all of their programming to stories about entertainment and entertainers. Magazines such as People fill their pages with stories of the private lives of famous people. Even newspapers, newsmagazines, and television news frequently delve into the lives of well-known personalities. Despite the number of articles and programs, few provide more than a superficial glimpse at their subjects. Lucent’s People in the News series offers young readers a deeper look into the lives of today’s newsmakers, the influences that have shaped them, and the impact they have had in their fields of endeavor and on other people’s lives. The subjects of the series hail from many disciplines and walks of life. They include authors, musicians, athletes, political leaders, entertainers, entrepreneurs, and others who have made a mark on modern life and who, in many cases, will continue to do so for years to come. These biographies are more than factual chronicles. Each book emphasizes the contributions, accomplishments, or deeds that have brought fame or notoriety to the individual and shows how that person has influenced modern life. Authors portray their subjects in a realistic, unsentimental light. For example, Bill Gates—the cofounder and chief executive officer of the software giant Microsoft—has been instrumental in making personal computers the most vital tool of the modern age. Few dispute his business savvy, his perseverance, or his technical ex-
4
pertise, yet critics say he is ruthless in his dealings with competitors and driven more by his desire to maintain Microsoft’s dominance in the computer industry than by an interest in furthering technology. In these books, young readers will encounter inspiring stories about real people who achieved success despite enormous obstacles. Oprah Winfrey—the most powerful, most watched, and wealthiest woman on television today—spent the first six years of her life in the care of her grandparents while her unwed mother sought work and a better life elsewhere. Her adolescence was colored by promiscuity, pregnancy at age fourteen, rape, and sexual abuse. Each author documents and supports his or her work with an array of primary and secondary source quotations taken from diaries, letters, speeches, and interviews. All quotes are footnoted to show readers exactly how and where biographers derive their information and provide guidance for further research. The quotations enliven the text by giving readers eyewitness views of the life and accomplishments of each person covered in the People in the News series. In addition, each book in the series includes photographs, annotated bibliographies, timelines, and comprehensive indexes. For both the casual reader and the student researcher, the People in the News series offers insight into the lives of today’s newsmakers—people who shape the way we live, work, and play in the modern age.
Foreword
5
Introduction
Making the Impossible Possible
W
hen Hillary Rodham Clinton graduated from Wellesley College in 1969, she was the first student in the school’s long and illustrious history to give the commencement address. It proved to be one of many groundbreaking firsts for the young woman now considered the most famous woman in the world. In part of her speech, she defined what she saw as her generation’s greatest challenge. She said, “The challenge now is to practice politics as the art of making what appears to be impossible, possible.”1 For the remainder of her life she herself would strive to do exactly that.
Breaking Barriers Hillary Rodham Clinton has broken down an amazing number of barriers long thought to be impossible to breach. She was the first female lawyer in her firm; the first working governor’s wife in the state of Arkansas; the first former First Lady ever elected to public office; the first female senator from the state of New York; the first woman to mount a high-profile campaign to become president of the United States; and the first secretary of state to renew diplomatic talks with Cuba in more than four decades. In addition to all these firsts, Clinton has been an advocate for children and families for more than forty years. Her work with the Children’s Defense Fund led to her founding her own organization, the Arkansas Advocates for Children and Families. In her
6
best-selling book, It Takes a Village: And Other Lessons Children Teach Us, Clinton writes, “I’m often asked what I would like to see happen above all else in our country and in our world. There are so many things to pray for. . . . But certainly my answer would be a world in which all children are loved and cared for—first by the families into which they are born, and then by all of us who are linked to them and to one another.”2
Making Mistakes and History Clinton readily admits to making high-profile mistakes. Her contentious relationship with the media and her inability to work with political opponents caused the failure of national health care reform in 1994. And according to some, her impressive run for the presidency in 2008 failed due to her inability to manage her staff. In spite of these shortcomings, Clinton has accomplished a great deal and set the stage for other female politicians to also make a difference. In the Newsweek article “Suffrage Hillary Style,” Hillary Clinton has accomplished a great deal in her life and has broken down barriers that were once considered impossible for women to breach.
correspondent Eleanor Clift theorizes that Clinton’s unsuccessful run for the presidency is similar to women’s fight for the vote in the early twentieth century. Clift writes, “New York defeated [suffrage] and [suffragette Carrie Chapman Catt] was asked what do women do now: ‘More votes for suffrage were cast today than ever before in our history. With this kind of vote I know we will win next time.’ And in 1917, suffrage passed in New York. Hillary’s campaign left 18 million cracks in the glass ceiling: it won’t take many more to finish the job she started.”3 As a recently elected senator, Clinton was asked what advice she would give young women considering a life in politics that would extend the fight she started. She said, “My message to young women is that, as tough as the political environment is, if you care about making a difference, you have to be willing to get out there and try. . . . We’ve broken through all of these barriers so that individual women can make the choice that’s right for them.”4 Having shown her own willingness to get out and try to make a difference, Hillary Clinton has proven that it is indeed possible to overcome the impossible.
8 Hillary Clinton
Chapter 1
In Her Time
W
hen discussing important individuals, historians often debate whether the times made the individual or the individual made the times. In the case of Hillary Clinton it is a combination of both the individual and the times coming together in perfect unison. There is also much that transpired before she was born that helped create the era in which she lived and influenced. As a typical yet distinct product of the postwar generation, Hillary Rodham Clinton developed into a politically and socially active woman due to a combination of the influential groundwork laid by the women who came before her, her own life experiences, and, most importantly, her own natural ability.
Dorothy and Hugh Hillary’s mother, Dorothy Emma Howell Rodham, proved to be one of the most important influences in her life. Born in a time when women were considered second-class citizens, she survived an abusive childhood with a firm belief in social justice and an open heart to those less fortunate. Dorothy Howell was born in 1919 in Chicago to parents who often left her to fend for herself. Her parents divorced in 1927, and her mother sent Dorothy and her younger sister to live with their grandmother in California. By the time she was fourteen, Dorothy was working for a family with two young children in exchange for living quarters and
9
Dorothy Rodham, Hillary’s mother, was one of the most significant influences in her life. three dollars a week. When Dorothy graduated from high school her plans for college were abandoned when her mother asked her to return to Chicago to work as her housekeeper. Years later Hillary asked her mother why she returned and Dorothy told her, “I’d hoped so hard that my mother would love me that I had to take the chance and find out. When she didn’t, I had nowhere else to go.”5 Hillary’s father, Hugh Rodham, survived the tough industrial environs of Scranton, Pennsylvania, due to his iron-willed mother, Hannah. A childhood accident nearly resulted in the amputation of both of his legs, but his mother stood firm against the medical establishment and nursed him back to health herself. Hugh Rodham inherited his mother’s iron determination, graduating from Penn State during the height of the Depression with a degree in physical education. He then went to Chicago without telling his parents and found a job selling drapery fabrics around the Midwest. It was on the job as a traveling salesman that Hugh met a pretty young woman applying for a job as a clerk-typist. Following a lengthy courtship, Dorothy Howell and Hugh Rodham mar-
10 Hillary Clinton
ried in 1942 shortly after the bombing of Pearl Harbor. With America’s entry into World War II, Hugh enlisted in the navy, became a chief petty officer stationed near Lake Michigan, and trained young men in self-defense. When he could, he would visit Dorothy in their small Chicago apartment. When the war ended in 1945, Hugh started his own drapery business and, along with Dorothy, began doing what most reunited couples in America were doing after the war: raising a family. Adding to the baby boom the country was experiencing was Dorothy and Hugh Rodham’s first child, Hillary Diane Rodham born October 26, 1947, in Chicago’s Edgewater Hospital. Younger brother Tony followed in 1950, and 1954 saw the arrival of another brother, named Hugh. Due to the postwar boom, Hugh Rodham’s small drapery business was successful and allowed him to move his family to the middle-class Chicago suburb of Park Ridge when Hillary was almost three.
Best of Both Worlds Hillary’s parents provided for her and her brothers so they lived comfortably in their middle-class existence. A highlight was the summers spent at their cabin in Pennsylvania near the Pocono Mountains. The Rodhams made sure to instill values in their children. Hugh and Dorothy Rodham instilled important values in their children and have supported Hillary’s career and political aspirations.
Dorothy underscored compassion and individuality, especially to her daughter. Years later Dorothy said, “I was determined that no daughter of mine was going to have to go through the agony of being afraid to say what she had on her mind.”6 Hillary absorbed the example of her parents’ values. They were exhibited through Hugh’s tough but fair assessment of the ways of the world and melded with Dorothy’s equally heartfelt belief in her daughter’s individuality. “I have a family that from the very beginning of my life said to me, ‘You are a valuable and special person,’” Hillary remembers. “And they also said to me, ‘You may be a girl but you can do whatever you choose to do.’”7 Early on Hillary exhibited natural leadership ability and resourcefulness as she helped raise her two younger brothers, worked in her father’s business, and organized other neighborhood children in fund-raising events. She also excelled in school and church activities. According to Dorothy, “She was already a perfectionist when she was eight. She always set very high standards for herself. She was almost scary.”8 As a little girl, Hillary was a self-described tomboy who made friends easily in her suburban neighborhood and took to the role of natural leader quite comfortably. She quickly absorbed the virtues of her mother’s kindness and her father’s tenacity. She also found herself the recipient of another aspect of her father’s personality that exists to this day: “I inherited his laugh, the same big rolling guffaw that can turn heads in a restaurant and send cats running from the room,”9 remembers Hillary.
A Different World The world Hillary knew as a child was in some ways radically different than the one that exists today. The country was booming throughout the 1950s in both finances and spirit despite a deep-rooted resentment of communism. Television existed, but the Rodhams’ discouraged their children from watching it and instead played imaginative word games created by Dorothy. Hillary and her friends could roam their neighborhood after school without a fear of strangers or criminal activity, save for the occasional bully. Overall the mood of the country created a sense of endless possibility for any child.
12 Hillary Clinton
Dealing with a Bully
I
n this excerpt from Hillary’s autobiography, Living History, she relates a story from her early years that demonstrates her courage: Shortly after we moved to Park Ridge, my mother noticed that I was reluctant to go outside to play. Sometimes I came in crying, complaining that the girl across the street was always pushing me around. Suzy O’Callaghan had older brothers, and was used to playing rough. I was four years old, but my mother was afraid that if I gave in to my fears, it would set a pattern for the rest of my life. One day, I came running into the house. She stopped me. “Go back out there,” she ordered, “and if Suzy hits you, you have my permission to hit her back. You have to stand up for yourself. There’s no room in this house for cowards.” She later told me she watched from behind the dining room curtain as I squared my shoulders and marched across the street. I returned a few minutes later, glowing with victory. “I can play with the boys,” I said. “And Suzy will be my friend!” She was and still is.
Hillary Rodham Clinton, Living History. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2003, p. 12.
This was not entirely true for many young women who were still taught that their place was strictly in the home. Hillary discovered this when her dreams of being an astronaut were dashed by a response to a letter she sent to the newly formed National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). The letter said girls were not accepted into the program, which disheartened Hillary a great deal. She was slightly consoled by the fact that her poor eyesight would have disqualified her anyway in spite of her gender.
In Her Time
13
Her mother still encouraged her dreams and hoped her daughter might some day become the country’s first female Supreme Court Justice. Her father made sure she and her brothers worked hard to succeed at whatever they did. According to her brother Tony, “We’d rake the leaves, cut the grass, pull the weeds, shovel snow. After your errands you’d walk in and say, ‘Gee dad, I could use two or three dollars.’ He’d flop another potato on the plate and say, ‘That’s your reward.’”10
Early Advocate for Children These life lessons manifested themselves in Hillary’s excellent grades in school as well as in her other endeavors. She earned several merit badges for community service in the Girl Scouts, played piano, took ballet lessons, and also played competitive sports. Of all the activities she undertook, the ones closest to her heart involved working with children. Her natural leadership ability, coupled with her father’s determination and her mother’s compassion, resulted in a lifelong devotion to children. In her book, It Takes a Village: And Other Lessons Children Teach Us, Hillary writes, From the time I was a child myself, I loved being around children, looking into their faces or listening to the stories they told. Like many firstborn children, I learned to care for children by baby-sitting my two younger brothers. As a teenager, I baby-sat for other children too, and at thirteen I got my first “real” job, supervising children at a park on summer mornings. Through my church, I helped care for the children of migrant farmworkers while their parents labored in the fruit orchards and vegetable fields near my home.11 The church to which she and her family belonged was another influential aspect of Hillary’s formative years. As a regular churchgoer of Park Ridge’s First United Methodist Church, she strove to live up to the motto of one of Methodism’s founders, John Wesley: “Do all the good you can, by all the means you can, in all the ways you can, as long as you can.”12
14 Hillary Clinton
Early in her life, Hillary realized that working with children was one of the causes closest to her heart.
In Her Time
15
The University of Life Helping Hillary put John Wesley’s words into action was a new youth minister named Don Jones who arrived in 1961 demonstrating faith through social action. As a young teen, Hillary was influenced greatly by Jones, whose example she still follows to this day. His weekend youth meetings were dubbed the University of Life and broke with the church’s traditional way of doing things. In order to show his young flock the importance of Wesley’s words, he organized excursions into Chicago’s many black ghettos where Hillary and her other white, middle-class classmates encountered extreme poverty for the first time. Jones also organized projects so that Hillary and the other pupils could see the effects of charity at work. The children of Hispanic migrant workers in Park Ridge were cared for by the Methodist church students who helped them learn English. Jones also inSpirituality and the church have always been important to Hillary, pictured here leaving Palm Sunday Mass with President Clinton, center, and Cardinal Roger Mahony.
spired Hillary with volumes of classic and contemporary books on theology and philosophy. Her most cherished memory remains a field trip Jones organized to hear another young minister named Martin Luther King Jr. speak in favor of racial equality. Afterward, Jones introduced the awestruck Hillary to the charismatic Baptist minister. Consequently, Hillary always credited Jones for her devotion to the underprivileged, but he modestly credits her innate spirituality. “This may sound corny but the key to understanding Hillary is her spiritual center,” says Jones. “Unlike some people who at a particular age land on a cause and become concerned, with Hillary I think of a continuous textual development. Her social concern and her political thought rest on a spiritual foundation.”13
Differing Politics Hillary’s ongoing development also included politics. Her father’s conservative Republican beliefs and her mother’s liberal Democratic views exposed her to different political points of view. As her family watched President John F. Kennedy’s funeral procession on television in shock and horror in 1963, Dorothy secretly admitted to Hillary that she had voted for the assassinated young president without Hugh’s knowledge. Throughout her years in high school, Hillary kept a high profile as a Republican supporter, even going so far as to work for conservative Barry Goldwater’s failed presidential campaign in 1964. She sported campaign regalia as a Goldwater Girl but was forced to see the other point of view when her teacher assigned her the role of Democratic candidate Lyndon B. Johnson in a class debate. Outwardly she sided with many of her conservative schoolteachers and her father, a child of the Depression who believed anyone can be successful if they work hard enough. Inwardly she began to have doubts, due in large part to the influence of Rev. Jones, the events of the 1960s that continued to unfold, and her mother’s belief that she could achieve as well as any boy. In the midst of all this, she still managed to be a typical teen who swooned and screamed with her friends when the Beatles and the Rolling Stones appeared on television. As First Lady she
In Her Time
17
Political Terminology
G
rowing up in a home with politically aware parents, Hillary knew the meaning of the following terms from an early age. progressive/traditionalist: Progressive refers to an individual or a movement that favors progress over tradition, often arrived at through successive steps. A traditionalist wishes to maintain the existing way of things. conservatism: A general preference for the existing order of society and an opposition to efforts to bring about sharp change. liberalism: A viewpoint or an ideology (a set of ideas) associated with free political institutions as well as support for a strong role of government in regulations. left wing/right wing: Terms for political ideologies that originated in England, based on the seating in Parliament, which featured seats on two sides of an aisle. The left wing holds the view that there are unacceptable social inequalities in the present order of society. The right wing supports the current order of things or a return to an earlier order of things. Republican/Democrat: The two main political parties in America. Both have various viewpoints, but it is largely held that the majority of Republicans are conservative while the majority of Democrats are liberal. The Republican Party is older and is often referred to as the Grand Old Party, or GOP. partisan/bipartisan: Usually in reference to Congress, partisan refers to one specific party banding together on an issue, while bipartisan refers to both parties coming together in unity.
E.D. Hirsch Jr., Joseph F. Kett, and James Trefil, The Dictionary of Cultural Literacy, 2nd ed. New York: Houghton Mifflin, 1993.
18 Hillary Clinton
said, “years later, when I met icons from my youth, like Paul McCartney, George Harrison [of the Beatles] and Mick Jagger [of the Rolling Stones], I didn’t know whether to shake hands or jump up and down squealing.”14
Welcome to Wellesley Much that has been written about Hillary Clinton’s early years paints a picture of a classic overachiever. This certainly appeared to be the case when she graduated in 1965 from Maine South High School in the top 5 percent of her class. She had her choice of colleges narrowed down to Smith College and Wellesley College, two of the so-called Seven Sisters of all-girl schools. Her mother showed no preference, but her father insisted that Hillary was an influential student at Wellesley College in Massachusetts and gave a passionate speech at her graduation ceremony.
whichever she chose it would not be full of what he considered no-good loafers. For no particular reason, Hillary chose Wellesley in Massachusetts. Her entry into college coincided with an escalation of events that marked the decade as one of the most turbulent in modern American history. The youth of the country had more material wealth than any generation before them which allowed them to question many long-held traditions that they considered to be out-of-date. As Hillary studied diligently, America’s involvement in the Vietnam War divided the nation. Other divisions began to erupt between young and old, rich and poor, black and white, and men and women. When she was in high school, Hillary had stated her ambition was to marry a senator. While in college, Hillary started a chapter of the Young Republicans, which promoted Republican ideals and recruited like-minded individuals on campus. However, she and her classmates began to have their focus shifted away from Republican ideals by the alarming events around them that continued at a jarring pace. One of the most disturbing to the young student was the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. The idealistic and charismatic speaker Hillary had met was murdered in Memphis, Tennessee, leaving her and the rest of the nation to question their core beliefs.
National Recognition College campuses were a major center for the exchange of ideas, and Hillary’s dorm room was a hub of activity among her fellow students. They discussed the daily events effecting the nation, with Hillary often being the most articulate among them. Her thesis at Wellesley reflected her evolving ideals as she questioned the use of violent activism in the face of the Vietnam War, which she now openly opposed. Prior to her graduation on May 31, 1969, Hillary was approached by a group of fellow students about delivering the commencement address. In the long and prestigious history of Wellesley many notable individuals had spoken at graduation, but no student had ever done so. School president Ruth Adams
20 Hillary Clinton
opposed the idea on the grounds that it had never been done. Hillary suggested that might be reason enough to at least try. After considerable thought, Hillary was granted the right to speak. As Hillary prepared the text of her speech, recent, explosive national events were on her mind. Black Muslim leader Malcolm X had been assassinated in 1965 and presidential candidate Robert Kennedy, younger brother of the slain president, had been assassinated in 1968. The civil rights, environmental, and women’s movements raged on, and most explosive of all, the Vietnam War was causing rioting in the streets of America. All of these events and much more had effected Hillary’s outlook on the world and helped shape her speech. Her parents had planned to attend but unfortunately, her mother was not well and was advised not to travel. Hugh Rodham would not go alone and told Hillary he would stay in Illinois and tend to Dorothy. Hillary was disappointed but understood. Dorothy was even more disappointed in not being able to see her only daughter realize the dream of graduating from a major university. Hillary’s speech, like others heard on college campuses that year, was both thought provoking and memorable. In part of her speech she said, “And so our questions, our questions about our institutions, about our colleges, about our churches, about our government, continue.”15 Hillary Rodham received a seven-minute standing ovation. The text of her speech was even reprinted in Life magazine. Her father had flown into Boston the night before, stayed near the airport, took the train to the campus the next day to hear her speech, congratulated his daughter and her friends, and then traveled right back to Park Ridge, all to surprise his graduating daughter. “All that mattered to me was that he made it to my graduation,” Clinton said, “which helped diminish the disappointment I felt over my mother’s absence. In many ways, this moment was as much hers as mine.”16
In Her Time
21
Chapter 2
“Billary”
A
s a young woman, Hillary Rodham was very aware that the options that lay before her were vastly different than those of her mother’s generation. Hillary took advantage of the changing role of women as she moved into the public spotlight because of her husband’s political aspirations and her own work advocating for children. The result would be a lifelong balancing act between progressive ideas and traditional standards.
Yale Law School Hillary Rodham could choose any Ivy League school after receiving her bachelor of arts with high honors in political science from Wellesley. Her thesis in social activism had her leaning toward a law degree, thinking that she could advocate best for children and families by working as a lawyer. Her applications to Harvard and Yale were both accepted the year before she graduated from Wellesley. Her decision on which school to attend was finalized when a Harvard student introduced her to one of his law professors. The professor was told of Hillary’s acceptance to Harvard and Yale, Harvard’s major rival. The professor commented that Harvard has no rival, nor did it need any more women. “I was leaning toward Yale anyway but this encounter removed any doubts about my choice,”17 said Hillary. The young woman with the overly thick glasses and preference for jeans and baggy shirts impressed many with her quick and
22
agile mind on the stately New Haven, Connecticut, campus of Yale. The fact that she had gained national attention with her Wellesley address added to her growing reputation when she started classes in the fall of 1969. She was one of only twentyseven female students out of a student body of 235. The times were changing and Hillary Rodham was determined to be involved in the change. Hillary utilized her massive reserves of energy and resourcefulness to excel in both her class work and outside activities. She served on the editorial board of the quarterly journal Yale Review of Law and Social Action and also cultivated an important relationship with Marian Wright Edelman. Edelman was a Yale graduate who became the first black woman to pass the bar exam in the state of Mississippi. She was working as a civil rights lawyer when she met Hillary in the spring of 1970. Hillary volunteered to work While at Yale, Hillary Rodham embarked on a long friendship with civil rights lawyer and children’s advocate Marian Wright Edelman.
The Children’s Defense Fund
H
illary Clinton worked for the Children’s Defense Fund (CDF) starting in college and until she became First Lady. The organization is still a viable and important advocate for children. Hillary served as CDF chair from 1986 to 1992. According to the CDF Web site: The Children’s Defense Fund’s mission is to ensure every child a Healthy Start, a Head Start, a Fair Start, a Safe Start, and a Moral Start in life and successful passage to adulthood with the help of caring families and communities. CDF provides a strong, effective voice for all the children of America who cannot vote or speak for themselves. We pay particular attention to the needs of poor and minority children and those with disabilities. CDF encourages preventive investment before they get sick or into trouble, drop out of school, or suffer family breakdown. CDF began in 1973 and is a private, nonprofit organization supported by foundation and corporate grants and individual donations. We have never taken government funds. The Children’s Defense Fund grew out of the Civil Rights Movement under the leadership of Marian Wright Edelman. It has become the nation’s strongest voice for children and families since its founding in 1973. CDF traces its heritage to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., his Poor People’s Campaign and the Washington Research Project, a nonprofit organization that monitored federal programs for low-income families.
Children’s Defense Fund. www.childrensdefense.org/site/PageServer?pagename=About_ CDF.
for Edelman’s advocacy group for children, which would eventually become the Children’s Defense Fund. Hillary received a grant, and this, along with her scholarship, is what she lived on while at Yale. That summer she gained valuable experience re-
24 Hillary Clinton
searching the plight of migrant workers’ children for a congressional committee headed by Minnesota senator and future vice president Walter Mondale.
The Boy from Hope When Hillary returned to classes in the fall she was more convinced then ever that her life’s work would be to benefit underprivileged and abused children. Her research work and other campus projects continued to impress those around her. One impressed fellow student was a charismatic Arkansas native and Oxford University Rhodes scholar with lofty political aspirations named Bill Clinton. Sporting what she called a Viking beard while in his first year at Yale, Hillary had noticed Bill early in the year boasting about the size of watermelons in his hometown of Hope, Arkansas. While doing research in the library, Hillary had seen the young man staring at her more than a few times. On one such occasion, he was in conversation with another student when Hillary took the initiative and approached Bill, stating, “If you’re going to keep staring at me and I’m going to keep staring back, we ought to at least know each other’s names. Mine’s Hillary Rodham. What’s yours?”18 The two began a casual conversation that continued on for some time. When Hillary saw Bill again a few days later, they easily picked up their conversation from where it had left off. Bill said, I was determined to spend some time with her. She said she was going to register for next term’s classes so I said I’d go, too. We stood in line and talked. I thought I was doing pretty well until we got to the front of the line. The registrar looked up at me and said, ‘Bill, what are you doing back here? You registered this morning.’ I turned beet red and Hillary laughed that big laugh of hers.”19 After Hillary registered, the law students spent the day at a nearby art museum, discovering even more about each other. Hillary learned of Bill’s desire for public service in the political arena and about his background growing up in Arkansas. His father had died in a car accident before he was born, forcing his
“Billary”
25
After All These Years
I
n her autobiography, Living History, Hillary Clinton writes about what she first noticed about Bill Clinton: I was starting to realize that this young man from Arkansas was much more complex than first impressions might suggest. To this day, he can astonish me with the connections he weaves between ideas and words and how he makes it all sound like music. I still love the way he thinks and the way he looks. One of the first things I noticed about Bill was the shape of his hands. His wrists are narrow and his fingers tapered and deft, like those of a pianist or surgeon. When we first met as students, I loved watching him turn the pages of a book. Now his hands are showing signs of age after thousands of handshakes and golf swings and miles of signatures. They are, like their owner, weathered but still expressive, attractive and resilient.
Hillary Rodham Clinton, Living History, New York: Simon & Schuster, 2003, pp. 53–54.
mother, Virginia, to raise him on her own with the help of her family while she finished nursing school. She later remarried and Bill and his younger half brother, Roger, managed to survive the often abusive behavior of his stepfather. Bill and Hillary began to see each other exclusively by the end of the semester and as both have stated, the conversation they started over thirty years ago continues to this day.
Meet the Parents As their heavy load of classes continued, Bill and Hillary saw more and more of each other. By the time the summer break arrived, Bill had convinced Hillary to join him in working for George McGovern’s ill-fated Democratic presidential campaign. Although she left the Republican Party while at Wellesley, Hillary was still
26 Hillary Clinton
politically active and found the Democratic Party more in line with her own beliefs. Bill managed McGovern’s campaign in Texas while Hillary diligently registered Hispanic voters in the state during the 1972 campaign. The two idealistic yet practical law students were clearly falling in love. Soon it came time to meet each other’s parents. Most of Hillary’s family took to Bill, except for her father, a lifelong Midwestern Republican highly skeptical of the charming young southern Hillary began dating another ambitious law student, Bill Clinton. The two worked together on George McGovern’s presidential campaign in 1972.
Democrat. Over time Bill won him over, even to the point that Hugh Rodham worked on some of Bill’s campaigns. When the couple went to Arkansas so Hillary could meet Virginia Clinton, the result was not much better. Mrs. Clinton was a woman who always dressed with a certain flair and had a striking gray streak in her hair. In contrast, Hillary rarely wore dresses and at the time did not put much effort or interest into her appearance or anyone else’s. The day before meeting Virginia she had mangled her hair in a botched attempt to style it. The meeting had both women less than impressed with the other. According to Bill, “I got a kick out of watching them try to figure each other out. Over time they did, as mother came to care less about Hillary’s appearance and Hillary came to care more about it. Underneath their different styles, they were both smart, tough, resilient, passionate women. When they got together, I didn’t stand a chance.”20
After Yale Although Hillary started at Yale a year before Bill, she graduated the same year as he did because she took an extra year to work at Yale’s Child Study Center, adding to her studies with child psyDuring the Watergate scandal that caused President Richard Nixon to resign, Rodham (pictured center) was part of the staff assigned to determine whether there were legal grounds to impeach the president.
chology and family law classes. Her work resulted in important research that was used in the book Beyond the Best Interests of the Child, written by Joseph Goldstein, Anna Freud, and Albert J. Solnit. She also worked diligently at the Carnegie Council on Children and at the Children’s Defense Fund with Marian Wright Edelman. In 1973 Hillary received her law degree. Following their graduation, Bill and Hillary had commitments in different states but made plans to keep in touch. Bill returned to Arkansas to teach law, and Hillary became a staff attorney with the Children’s Defense Fund in Cambridge, Massachusetts. They stayed in touch by phone and lengthy visits but the need to be in constant contact was almost overwhelming. Their work was important to them, but their feelings for each other were equally important. While they continued to grapple with their feelings, Hillary was offered an important legal position. During the 1972 presidential campaign, several burglars were caught breaking into the offices of the Democratic National Committee in the Watergate complex in Washington, D.C. Although Republican president Richard Nixon easily won reelection, the ongoing investigation of the Watergate break-in and its subsequent cover-up revealed a trail that eventually led to the president. A Senate judiciary committee was put in charge of pursuing legal grounds for impeachment of the president. One of the three women lawyers out of a staff of forty-three was Hillary Rodham. She conducted research to determine the president’s guilt or innocence. Eventually the staff disbanded when on August 8, 1974, President Nixon became the first president to resign from office.
Following Her Heart Following Nixon’s resignation, Hillary’s work investigating the impeachment earned her an enhanced reputation in the legal community. She could have joined any legal firm in the country, earning hundreds of thousands of dollars a year. Friends, colleagues, and family members all encouraged her to join a prestigious law firm, but she received another offer that was even more enticing.
“Billary”
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After weighing various career options, Hillary decided to follow her heart and move to Arkansas to help Bill launch his campaign for a seat in Congress. Bill Clinton had asked Hillary to join him on the teaching staff of the University of Arkansas School of Law in Fayetteville. Friends and family advised her not to go, but ultimately the decision was Hillary’s to make. “I just finally decided, you know, this is no way to make a decision,” said Hillary. “When you love somebody, you just have to go and see what it’s like.”21 Hillary’s life-altering decision to go to Arkansas was also based on her evolving conflict over being a public advocate for what she believed in or working within the political system to enact the policy changes she felt were important. Bill, who felt much the same way she did about important issues, helped her with her conflict. She arrived in Arkansas on a hot August night in 1974, and within forty-eight hours she was teaching at the same school as Bill, running a legal aid clinic, and helping Bill with his newly launched campaign for a seat in Congress.
30 Hillary Clinton
Her life in Arkansas was vastly different than anything she had experienced before. Growing up in suburban Illinois, living at eastern colleges, and working for an important judiciary committee in Washington did not prepare her for small-town life in the rural South. When one of her students had not been in class for a few days, she dialed information to get his home phone number. The operator knew the student and told Hillary the young man had gone camping. “I had never before lived in a place so small, friendly and Southern and I loved it, “ Hillary said. She even enjoyed the school’s trademark rallying cry. She recalled, “I went to Arkansas Razorback football games and learned to ‘call the hogs.’”22
Retail Politics Hillary’s other responsibility also moved her closer toward policy change in the political arena instead of public advocacy. She had worked on campaigns before but Bill Clinton’s run for the fourth congressional district gave the race a vested interest by being personally involved with the candidate. The district was a long-held seat by Republican John Paul Hammerschmidt, and Together Bill and Hillary made an impressive couple and campaign team. They were married on October 11, 1975.
even though Clinton lost, he came closer than any other Democrat had before. He lost by a mere four percentage points. Part of his success was due in large part to Hillary. Bill was a natural when it came to going out and meeting and greeting voters, which is often referred to as “retail politics.” Hillary’s strength was her amazing organizational skills, which she used to run Bill’s campaign. Together they made an impressive team and proved it by winning when Bill ran for attorney general in 1976. Bill’s instruction to his staff was simple and direct: “Anything Hillary says, do it. She’s the smartest woman I ever met.”23 Hillary’s decisions at this time in her life were not made lightly, even though her friends and family shook their heads in disbelief at some of her choices, such as moving to rural Arkansas. When she visited friends in Illinois the summer of 1975 and explained to them how fulfilling her life was and how much Bill meant to her, she had it confirmed that her choice was the right one. When she returned, Bill met her at the airport and said, “You know that little house you said you liked? Well, I bought it. Now you have to marry me.”24 The house in Fayetteville was to Hillary’s liking but the proposal took her by surprise. Then, on October 11, 1975, in the presence of friends and family, Bill and Hillary were married in the house he bought for her.
Political and Legal Ascent The following year, Bill’s successful run for state attorney general made him the youngest official in the state. For Hillary, straddling the dual roles of politician’s wife and successful career woman was difficult but extremely rewarding. Bill’s ascent into Arkansas politics meant a move to Little Rock and greater responsibilities, not the least of which was working on Jimmy Carter’s presidential campaign. Bill managed the campaign in Arkansas and Hillary agreed to work in Indiana. As Indiana’s field coordinator, Hillary was required to get Democratic votes in the heavily Republican state. This meant getting important data from the men who ran Indiana’s Democratic Party, so she set up a dinner meeting to do just that. As the only woman at a table of men who had been drinking, she repeatedly asked
32 Hillary Clinton
Hillary Clinton was the first female lawyer at Rose Law Firm in Little Rock, Arkansas, and continued to work there throughout her husband’s campaign for governor. them for the information. One of the men grabbed her by the neck and yelled at her to shut up, she would get her data and that would be the end of it. With her heart pounding in her chest, Hillary removed his hand and told the man, “First, don’t ever touch me again. Second, if you were as fast with the answers to my questions as you are with your hands I’d have the information I need to do my job.”25
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Carter did not win in Indiana but he did win the election. By that time Hillary had other commitments. She had begun working as the first female lawyer at Rose Law Firm in Little Rock, Arkansas, and was now making more money than her husband. President Carter was aware of her work for his campaign and appointed her to the board of his newly formed Legal Services Corporation. The board would provide financial services to legal aid clinics throughout the country. If this were not enough work for the productive young lawyer she also founded and presided over the Arkansas Advocates for Children and Families. This nonprofit advocacy group provided legal help to low-income families. Hillary continued to work in both public advocacy and politics as her husband decided to run for governor of Arkansas. If all of this was not enough, Hillary was forced to scale back on her casework for another new responsibility. In February 1980, Bill and Hillary planned to welcome the birth of their daughter.
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Chapter 3 From State House to White House
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s her husband campaigned for Arkansas governor, Hillary Rodham Clinton continued to manage the delicate balance between being a politician’s wife and a career woman. Some of her husband’s adversaries saw the balance she attempted as a conflict between being a traditional role model and the progressive ideals of being a lawyer. This balance would become even more of a challenge when her husband entered the race for president of the United States.
Arkansas’s Youngest Governor Bill Clinton’s term as attorney general of Arkansas became a springboard for much greater political aspirations that required a great deal of help from Hillary. In 1978 Bill launched his campaign for state governor and along with his young and eager staff, he relied heavily on the advice of his wife. Hillary helped Bill’s campaign while continuing to work at Rose Law Firm. Due to her success, they were able to afford a house in the upper-middle-class suburb of Hillcrest. Hillary’s appearance also underwent a change, evolving from the jeans and baggy shirts of her college days to more professional attire. A shorter hairstyle and contacts instead of glasses contributed to her professional demeanor. “I tried wearing contacts from the time I was sixteen-years-old and I never could get them to work,” she said. “I have terrible eyesight. Those glasses were very, very huge. Then
35
In 1978, thirty-two-year-old Bill Clinton became the youngest governor in Arkansas history. they came out with soft, thinner contacts, and it was like a miracle to me.”26 This new look, but mostly her impressive organizational skills, went a long way in helping her husband win the election. He defeated his Republican opponent by a margin of almost two to one. Thirty-two-year-old Bill Clinton became the youngest governor in Arkansas history. Hillary broke new ground as well, becoming the first working governor’s wife in the history of the state. The following year Hillary’s career also took an upward turn. She went from being her firm’s only female lawyer to the firm’s first female full partner, still earning more money than her husband. The Clintons then decided it was time for a long overdue vacation.
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Chelsea Morning Bill and Hillary took their vacation in Europe, with a lengthy portion of it in England. Bill showed Hillary many of his old hangouts when he was a young student at Oxford University. “One day as we window-shopped down King’s Road in Chelsea,” said Bill, “The loudspeaker of a store blared out Judy [Collins’s] version of Joni Mitchell’s ‘Chelsea Morning.’ We agreed on the spot that if we ever had a daughter we’d call her Chelsea.”27 When they returned from their vacation, Bill announced that Hillary would be the chairperson of the Rural Health Advisory Committee. The purpose of the committee was to deal with the problems of providing health care to some of the state’s most isolated rural areas. The job was difficult but extremely rewarding
Preparing Chelsea for the Spotlight
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hen Eleanor Clift of Newsweek interviewed Hillary Rodham Clinton in 1992, she asked her how she and her husband had prepared their young daughter for life in the spotlight of political campaigns. Clinton replied, We’ve talked to her ever since she was about 6 or 7 years old about campaigns and the kind of things people say. . . . I knew that Chelsea by that time was old enough to turn on the TV and pay attention. And we were at dinner one night and I told her your daddy is going to run for governor again, and when people run for office, other people say things about them. And her eyes got real big—she just couldn’t imagine that—and I said, you just pretend to be your daddy and what would you say if you want to run for governor. And she said something like, ‘I’ve done a good job—elect me.’ Quoted in Eleanor Clift, “I Think We’re Ready,” Newsweek, February 3, 1992, pp. 22–23.
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for Hillary, who so much wanted to help provide for the needs of children and families. As chair, Hillary discovered that trying to convince people to change the status quo was a difficult but worthy challenge. Her experience on the committee would also prove valuable later in her career. The year 1980 was bittersweet for the Clintons. Before the new decade even began, the couple had exciting news. According to Hillary, Bill and I had wanted to start a family immediately after we married, in 1975, but we were not having much luck. In 1979, we scheduled an appointment to visit a fertility clinic right after a long-awaited vacation. Lo and behold, I got pregnant. I have often remarked to my husband that we might have had more children if we had taken more vacations!28 Chelsea Victoria Clinton was born on February 27, 1980. The birth announcement states the parents’ names as Bill Clinton and Hillary Rodham. Because Hillary had not taken Bill’s last name when they married, political adversaries took advantage of this to imply that their relationship was more of a professional arrangeOn February 27, 1980, Hillary and Bill Clinton celebrated the birth of their daughter, Chelsea Victoria.
ment than a real marriage. As far as Bill was concerned, Hillary could use any name she wanted, but his advisers wanted her to legally change her name to Clinton. Other issues arose when Bill ran for reelection. President Carter had allowed Cuban refugees into the United States and one of the places they were encamped was Fort Chaffee, Arkansas. The refugees rioted, forcing Bill to call in the National Guard. Bill also raised the registration fee for vehicles to help offset some of the state’s economic problems. His opponents succeeded in convincing angry voters not to reelect Bill. In November 1980, both President Jimmy Carter and Governor Bill Clinton were voted out of office after one term.
Hillary Rodham Clinton After Bill lost the election, he fell into a despair which his wife tried to console as best as she could. There was only so much she could do since she was now a new mother. She later said, “When Chelsea Victoria Clinton lay in my arms for the first time, I was overwhelmed by the love and responsibility I felt for her. Despite all the books I had read, all the children I had studied and advocated for, nothing had prepared me for the sheer miracle of her being.”29 Bill and Hillary decided that raising Chelsea was the most important factor to consider in whatever decisions they made. Hillary returned to work and she made sure that Chelsea ended each day in her mother’s company. She and Bill began coordinating their schedules according to their daughter’s needs. They also decided that no matter what, Chelsea would never be subjected to public scrutiny. They created what they called “a zone of privacy” for Chelsea and decided that the media would never interview her or intrude on her life. Over the years, the Clintons successfully maintained the zone of privacy around Chelsea through their time in the White House. Hillary’s caseload at her law firm remained impressive while Bill took a position with another law firm in Arkansas. His despair over his forced retirement from politics was short lived as he immediately began planning a run for reelection in 1982. Hillary
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realized that the controversy over her name was bound to come up again. “The pressure on me to conform had increased dramatically when Bill was elected Governor in 1978,” said Hillary. “For the first time I came to realize how my personal choices could impact my husband’s political future. . . . I learned the hard way that some voters in Arkansas were seriously offended by the fact that I kept my maiden name.”30 After much consideration, Hillary lost 15 pounds, dyed her hair a lighter color, adjusted her wardrobe even more, and legally changed her name to Hillary Rodham Clinton, all to help her husband regain the governership of Arkansas. The campaign was hard work for all concerned, but the Clintons’ teamwork paid off when Bill was reelected. He was sworn in as governor in January 1983.
Working First Lady Hillary gave in to the demand to change her outward appearance and legal name but she would not compromise her core beliefs. During Bill’s first term he had made Hillary responsible for successfully raising the standard of medical care in the state—especially in the poorest rural areas—by creating a helicopter service called Angel One which airlifted isolated individuals to medical treatment. She had greatly diminished the state’s infant mortality rate by creating the state’s first neonatal care unit, and other successful programs she implemented as chairperson of the Rural Health Advisory Committee. Shortly after Bill returned to the governor’s office, he named Hillary to head the Arkansas Education Standards Committee. The committee was formed to raise Arkansas’ education ranking in the nation. Bill thought Hillary was perfect for the job because of her love of children. Knowing the criticism she would again endure in taking such a position as the wife of the governor, Hillary reluctantly agreed to do the job. Hillary learned from her own parents and from her work with children at Yale the importance of early childhood education. Children whose parents talk and read to them as early as possible have the highest level of success in school. Hillary discovered on the campaign trail that this was sadly lacking in Arkansas. She
40 Hillary Clinton
said, “Chelsea was holding my hand when I approached a group of women and children and introduced myself. I said to one mother who was holding an infant, ‘I bet you’re having fun playing with her and talking to her all the time.’ The woman looked at me in amazement and said, ‘Why would I talk to her? She can’t talk back.’”31 As head of the Arkansas Education Standards Committee, Clinton expanded programs that helped prepare children for school by teaching parents how to get their children to read and write at home.
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This moment, and others like it, inspired Hillary to help expand the Home Instruction Program for Preschool Youngsters (HIPPY) throughout the state. The program teaches parents how to teach their children to read and write at home before they start school. Over time, it proved to be so successful that Hillary was named Arkansas Woman of the Year by the state’s press association in 1983. Hillary’s hard work in promoting the causes closest to her heart was not without controversy. Many people in Arkansas felt the job of a governor’s wife was ceremonial and should consist of public appearances by her husband’s side. When local press chose to write about the headband in her hair instead of the state’s educational crisis, Hillary said, “Good grief, show me a woman who hasn’t changed her hair! . . . We really miss the boat when we don’t pay attention to what’s really going to change our children’s lives and instead pay attention to my headbands.”32
Controversy and Challenge Hillary traversed the state talking to individuals involved in education and worked tirelessly researching the best way to improve the state’s education system. Although her support of a pay raise for teachers was welcomed, mandatory testing of all teachers was a major aspect of Hillary’s plan that angered many educators. Since Hillary saw the success in standardized tests for students, she felt the same should be expected of their teachers. At several public debates on the issue, Hillary was subjected to personal attacks. “The debate was so bitter,” she recalled, “one school librarian said I was ‘lower than a snake’s belly.’ I tried to remember that I was being called names not because of who I was but what I represented.”33 Hillary’s education reforms were difficult to enact, but they all dramatically enhanced student success throughout the state. President Ronald Reagan’s secretary of education, Terrence Bell, publicly cited the reforms as being examples for the whole country to follow. Hillary succeeded at these difficult tasks while still working as a lawyer and sitting on the boards of several large corporations, such as Wal-Mart and the yogurt company TCBY. As a board member, Hillary sought to enhance the role of
42 Hillary Clinton
women in the workplace. She also fought for it in her own profession as a member of the American Bar Association’s Commission on Women in the Profession. She also continued her work with the Children’s Defense Fund, becoming the chairperson in 1986 and flying to Washington, D.C., monthly to organize the staff. Her work was rewarded with important improvements in Arkansas’ way of life. And in 1988 and again in 1992, the National Law Journal named her one of the country’s top 100 lawyers.
Race to the White House All of Hillary’s hard work helped her husband get reelected governor of Arkansas in 1984, 1986, 1988, and 1990. Her belief in her husband’s agenda required her to defend him in sometimes unconventional ways. When Bill was in Washington, D.C., on business during the election of 1990, his opponent, Tom McRae, held a press conference to deride the governor for not debating him and to degrade his record. He did not mention that Bill had challenged him to a debate to which McRae failed to appear. He also did not expect the governor’s wife to show up at the press conference to state, “Tom, who was the one person who didn’t show up at Springdale? Give me a break! I mean, I think we ought to get the record straight.”34 She then embarrassed McRae by proudly listing many of her husband’s impressive accomplishments. Bill Clinton’s tenure as governor began receiving national attention among Democratic Party officials. They approached him to run for president in 1988, but after much soul searching, Bill and Hillary decided that Chelsea was still too young to be put through such intense scrutiny. By 1991, when Chelsea was eleven, they decided the time was right to take their message of a new form of political action to the national level. The presidential race of 1992 was a battleground during the primary season with Bill and Hillary both defending themselves against accusations of marital unfaithfulness, lack of character, and various other charges that emerged throughout the race. There was not much they endured that they had not experienced in Arkansas, but the national press corps and Bill’s opponents were
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Democratic presidential hopeful Bill Clinton hugs Hillary at his gubernatorial election night party in February 1992. Controversy and accusations made the campaign difficult for the couple but they persevered and Bill won the election. much more plentiful in a presidential campaign. Bill overcame the obstacles, earned his party’s nomination, and ran for president against sitting Republican president George H.W. Bush and independent candidate Ross Perot in the general election. Although there were moments when she was caught unprepared and some of her statements were taken out of context,
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Highlights of Hillary on the Campaign Trail
H
illary Clinton proved to be a very important asset to her husband’s presidential campaign. George Stephanopoulos explains: The Republicans . . . had won three presidential campaigns in a row, and they were ruthless. We had to be battle ready just to be in the game—to break down the bureaucracy and replacing campaigning by conference call with a single strategic center for attacks and counterattacks. Hillary got it immediately. ‘What you’re describing is a war room,’ she said, giving us both a name and an attitude.
George Stephanopoulos, All Too Human: A Political Education. New York: Little, Brown, 1999, p. 86.
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hen her husband’s presidential campaign was in trouble, Hillary Clinton was often brought in to control the damage. Both Clintons appeared on the TV show 60 Minutes to dismiss an early scandal. Hillary’s words made her a national celebrity. She said, “I’m not sitting here, some little woman standing by her man like [country singer] Tammy Wynette. I’m sitting here because I love him and I respect him and I honor what he’s been through and what we’ve been through together. You know, if that’s not enough for people then heck, don’t vote for him.” Other times Hillary’s words had the opposite effect. When asked why she kept working during the campaign, Hillary made an off-the-cuff remark that offended some voters when they heard it out of context. Hillary had said, “I suppose I could have stayed home and baked cookies and had teas, but what I decided to do was to fulfill my profession which I entered before my husband entered public life.”
Quoted in Frontline: The Clinton Years, DVD, directed by Brent E. Huffman and Katerina Monemvassitis, PBS Home Video, 2001.
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Hillary Clinton’s presence during the race was very important to her husband’s growing popularity. According to Bill’s campaign strategist George Stephanopoulos, “She was an unqualified political asset—her husband’s chief adviser and candidate in her own parallel campaign. . . . The fact that Clinton was with such a strong, smart, successful woman made people like him even more.”35 On Election Day 1992, Bill Clinton was voted into the most powerful office in the world. The innovative team of Bill and Hillary were poised for even higher levels of success and even greater public scrutiny as forty-second president and First Lady of the United States.
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Chapter 4
Hillaryland
B
ill and Hillary Clinton were the first couple born after World War II to reside in the White House, radically altering the image most people had of the president and First Lady. Hillary continued to challenge the perception some people held of a modern woman. She also learned some hard lessons concerning how business is done in Washington, D.C., by attempting the most far-reaching social policy change in U.S. history.
A First Lady Like No Other After Bill Clinton was elected, Hillary Clinton proved to be one of his most important aides. He had to find people for his cabinet and staff who could help with the economy, left in shambles by the previous administration. The problems with the economy had resulted in a massive federal budget deficit that was the highest in history. This was an important priority, as were many of the other issues Clinton campaigned on that helped get him elected. The process was chaotic but the outcome was historic. In her book, Hidden Power: Presidential Marriages That Shaped Our Recent History, author Kati Marton writes, “By insisting that half of all senior political appointees be women, Hillary transformed the Washington political culture. It was her most enduring contribution. The women who ultimately headed up the Justice Department, Health and Human Services, Energy . . . all owed Hillary a tremendous debt.”36
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First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton in the East Room of the White House. She often advised her husband on political matters. The fact that Hillary was an adviser to her husband was not new, but a First Lady advising the president of the United States on national issues was new to the American public. Many people were shocked and most did not approve. Hillary also shattered traditional views of the First Lady when she chose to continue working.
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Hillary also antagonized the media by requesting that the press corps no longer have offices inside the White House. They were moved elsewhere on the grounds, which increased the ongoing conflict between the First Lady and the press corps. Although the criticism sometimes had Hillary questioning her ability, her husband felt she was more than up to the task. He later wrote, “Hillary would be the most professionally accomplished first lady in history. . . . Of course, such activism would make her more controversial with those who thought first ladies should stay above the fray, or who had disagreed with us politically, but that too, was part of what our generational change meant.”37
A New Navigator Five days after Bill Clinton was sworn in as president, he named Hillary to head the Health Care Task Force. Health care reform was viewed as the most sweeping social change in America’s history, and it had been attempted by almost every president of the twentieth century without success. The nation’s health care system was in serious need of overhaul for a multitude of reasons. Tens of millions of Americans either did not have enough health care coverage or had none at all due to the expensive cost. The system as it existed was draining the national economy and affecting America’s ability to compete in the global market. Dealing with the problem quickly could greatly benefit the ailing economy and the average citizen. The president boasted of his choice of Hillary chairing the board of the Health Care Task Force when he gave his State of the Union address later that year. He said, “When I launched our nation on this journey to reform the health care system, I knew I needed a talented navigator. Someone with a rigorous mind, a steady compass, a caring heart. Luckily, for me and our nation, I didn’t have to look very far.”38 Hillary wasted no time navigating the journey, having already set up an office and staff in the West Wing of the White House and dubbing it Hillaryland. No First Lady had ever had offices in the West Wing before, and it was criticized since it is where official national business is conducted. Despite her critics, Hillary
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diligently worked at researching and forming the new laws with her staff. The task itself had two goals: Reform the existing system so it would be more fair and help the over 40 million Americans without health care get access to it. The process included numerous in-depth interviews with individuals in the health care industry, government experts, and people dealing with catastrophic events when their insurance underpaid their needs. “I have never seen an issue that is as complicated as this,” said Hillary at the time. “I can see why for fifty years people have tiptoed toward this problem and turned around and run away.”39 President Clinton appointed Hillary as the chair of the Health Care Task Force, which aimed to make the existing health care system fairer and increase access to health care for millions of Americans.
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Hard Work and Hard Times The hard work Hillary and her staff were putting into the health care issue was made even more difficult by some of Hillary’s early decisions as well as some circumstances out of her control. Hillary decided to conduct all of her meetings in closed-door sessions that further alienated the media as well as opponents of the president’s administration. Her decision was based on the one hundred days the president had given her to come up with the landmark legislation so it would be ready for the next session of Congress. She thought the process would go faster without involving the media. This decision made Hillary even less popular among some important people in Washington, D.C. In the midst of the intense long hours spent researching and organizing health care reform legislation, Hillary learned that her father, Hugh Rodham, suffered a massive stroke on March 1, 1993. She rushed to his hospital bed with the rest of her family and kept a vigil. The family decided to take Hugh off of life support so he could die peacefully, but he surprised everyone by breathing on his own. It was not widely known at the time that Hillary was experiencing a personal health care crisis of her own while struggling to fix America’s health care crisis. In early April Hillary was scheduled to give a speech in Texas that forced her to leave her father’s bedside. In her speech she said in part, “We need a new politics of meaning. . . . We need a definition of civil society which answers the unanswerable questions posed by both market forces and the governmental ones, as to how we can have a society that fills us again and makes us feel that we are part of something bigger than ourselves.”40 Her father passed away the next day. In July the Clintons received more devastating news. Vince Foster, who had worked with Hillary at the Rose Law Firm and been a close family friend of the Clintons for many years, was found dead on a park bench with a gunshot wound to the head, the victim of an apparent suicide. Foster had been a legal adviser to the president and found the task to be more than he could handle when trying to fend off accusations aimed at the president and First Lady. His suicide note said, “I was not meant for the job
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or the spotlight of public life in Washington. Here ruining people is considered sport.”41 The Clintons were emotionally distraught by the loss of their friend and colleague. Some of the media, already critical of the way the White House was being run, began insinuating that the Clintons may have had something to do with Foster’s death. There were also ongoing media investigations of the Clintons’ finances, personal relationship, and Hillary’s handling of the health care crisis. Journalist Bob Woodward observed, “Some confused her vigorous advocacy on behalf of certain points of view, especially on health care, with inflexibility.”42 The effect of such scrutiny was evident in the First Lady’s interviews at the time. When she was asked about the possible disaster that could come from her work on health care reform, she said, “I understood, as many people never tired of telling me, that this could be a disaster, that I could get blamed. . . . That didn’t bother me. Heat comes with anything. If I had done nothing, I would have gotten heat. So better to get heat trying to do something important for people.”43
The Talking Dog The health care reform legislation was completed, but the twelvehundred-page bill was severely criticized by opponents. Critics said it was too long, too complex, and appeared to be a government takeover of the health care industry. Health insurance companies were the biggest opponents. They paid for a series of TV commercials with an elderly couple claiming that the new legislation would worsen the health care crisis in America. To counter the negative publicity, Hillary went on a speaking tour around the country. Many experts in their field, such as former surgeon general C. Everett Koop, found the legislation successful in addressing all the major issues of health care. As to its length, critics failed to mention that the majority of bills put before Congress are often longer than the health care reform legislation. Hillary mentioned all of these points and more on her speaking tour. Unfortunately, not many in the crowds heard the message as hecklers shouted down Hillary and threats of violence
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On September 28, 1993, Hillary Rodham Clinton became the first sitting First Lady in history to testify before Congress to support her health care reform legislation. required the Secret Service to beef up security more than ever before. On September 28, 1993, Hillary presented the health care reform legislation to Congress. She was the first sitting First Lady in history to testify before Congress. Her testimony before the House Ways and Means Committee consisted of her opening statement and then answering questions put to her by the committee.
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Her knowledge and forthright delivery impressed almost everyone who witnessed it. Over the next several days, she gave similar testimony in both the House and the Senate. When her testimony was over, Hillary said, “While many members genuinely appreciated the finer points of the health care debate, I realized that some of the laudatory responses to my testimony was just the latest example of ‘the talking dog syndrome’ which I had learned about as First Lady of Arkansas.” She explained that the talking dog syndrome evolved from a quote of eighteenth-century writer Samuel Johnson, who said, “A woman preaching is like a dog walking on its hind legs. It is not done well, but you are surprised to find it done at all.”44
Scandal After Scandal The health care reform legislation finally presented to Congress on October 26, 1993, totaled 1,342 pages. Its presentation was battled on the Senate floor with some Democrats complaining it was pro industry while Republicans complained it was big government taking over the health care industry. Later that night a weary Hillary climbed the stairs of the White House residence. Staff members gave her a hoopskirt and black wig to wear as Dolley Madison to her surprise birthday party. Then she was taken into her party where the staff of Hillaryland also wore costumes. The president of the United States appeared in his own costume of white wig and tights. “Bill was disguised as President James Madison,” said Hillary. “I loved him for it but I was glad we were living in the late twentieth century. He looks better in a suit.”45 Because of political partisanship, the work of Hillary and her staff on health care reform resulted in the Health Security Act of 1994, a much weaker legislation. The bill that passed did not give health care coverage to the millions of Americans who needed it nor did it improve the coverage for Americans who were underinsured. The Clinton administration was greatly disappointed by the failure. It was soon followed by elections in which the Republican Party took control of the Congress. Following the failure of health care reform, a series of unprecedented scandals rocked the White House, which drew focus away
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The “Gates” of Clinton
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fter the Watergate scandal during the Nixon administration, journalists took to naming political scandals with the suffix -gate. There were several such scandals during the Clinton administration that directly or indirectly involved Hillary. They include: Troopergate: It was alleged that while governor of Arkansas, Bill Clinton used state troopers to bring women to his residence. The story was later discovered to be unfounded but hurt Hillary deeply. Filegate: Accusations were made that Hillary took secret FBI files to find information to use against her enemies. Official investigations proved the story had no merit. Travelgate: Hillary was accused of political spite when she oversaw the firing of several White House travel officers who had worked for the Bush administration. An investigation showed that Hillary had very little to do with the firings, and that the firings themselves were justified.
Gene Lyons and Joe Conason, The Hunting of the President. New York: Thomas Dunne Books, 2000.
from the progressive reforms that the Clintons were attempting to enact. Millions of dollars were spent investigating the multiple scandals that eventually affected the administration’s ability to govern. All of the time, money, and energy spent investigating the administration did not result in a single charge against the Clintons.
Woman of the World By early 1995, Hillary’s role in her husband’s administration appeared to be almost invisible. In truth she was still as vital as before but chose a low profile by not appearing at staff meetings.
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She was being fully briefed on policy issues but discussed them at length with the president in private. She also began a series of speaking engagements that took her around the world and bolstered her image and that of the United States in the international community. She traveled the world as an outspoken advocate of women’s and children’s rights, earning a reputation as a speaker and goodwill ambassador that surpassed that of her childhood idol, First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt. Of all her travels, the one that became the most famous was her trip to the United Nations World Conference on Women in Beijing, China. China has a long history of human rights violations, and international events prior to the conference almost kept Hillary from speaking at the event as planned. The details of her visit were finalized and the American entourage, including secretary of state Madeleine Albright, arrived in Beijing amid threats of unrest and violence. Hillary took the stage and gave a speech equating the violation of women’s rights with the violation of human rights. She listed graphic examples of the abuse of women by individuals and governments. Albright recalls, “I didn’t think it possible to arouse an audience in Beijing, which was made up of people from every culture listening to translators mangle the First Lady’s grammar in a monotone. But Hillary’s speech was a stunner. It was beautifully written and forcefully delivered. . . . As the First Lady spoke, the multilingual chatter in the hall quieted. When she finished the applause came in waves.”46 For Hillary’s part, she welcomed her new image as the most famous woman in the world, but the work was what mattered. She returned to the United States to discuss Beijing’s conference on TV and radio call-in shows. One incident proved how much work was still needed. Hillary recalls, “I got a call from a man in the Middle East who asked me, what on earth did I mean that women’s rights were human rights. And I said, ‘Well, sir, if you would for a moment, shut your eyes and imagine all the rights that you, as a man, take for granted. We want the same rights.’ And there was a pause. And he said, ‘That’s impossible!’ Well it is not only not impossible, it must be made possible and real.”47
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Clinton’s first book, It Takes a Village, was released in 1996 and became a best seller. She donated the proceeds to children’s charities.
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Hillary Clinton’s Favorite First Lady
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f all the women who have been First Lady, Hillary has often said her personal favorite is Eleanor Roosevelt. Like Hillary Clinton, Eleanor Roosevelt was a very public and controversial figure in her time for breaking with many of the previous traditions of First Lady and being actively involved in her husband’s presidency. She often did legwork for President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, because his polio limited his mobility. After her husband died in office, Roosevelt continued to be a very public figure. In 1957 journalist Mike Wallace interviewed her, asking how it felt to be disliked by so many people for challenging the status quo: Wallace: Mrs. Roosevelt, I think that you would agree that a good many people hated your husband. They even hated you. Mrs. Roosevelt: Oh, yes. A great many still do. Wallace: Why? Mrs. Roosevelt: Well if you take a stand, in any way, and people feel that you have success in a following, those who disagree with you are going to feel strongly about it. . . . There was a real core of hatred. The people would call him “that man.” I remember one man who rejoiced, actually, when he died. But I suppose that this is just a feeling that certain people had that he was destroying the thing that they held dear and touched them. And naturally, you react to that with hatred.
Quoted in Mike Wallace and Paul Gates, Between You and Me. New York: Hyperion, 2005, p. 38.
Whitewater The year 1996 was another bittersweet year for the Clintons. Bill won reelection, becoming the first Democratic president to do so since Franklin Roosevelt five decades earlier. The Republicans,
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however, still had control in both houses of Congress and opponents, led by House Speaker Newt Gingrich, stepped up the campaign to block the president’s progressive policies. Also in 1996 Hillary wrote and published her first book, It Takes a Village, which became a best seller. She donated the proceeds to children’s charities, since the book focuses on her most cherished subject. After recording an audio version of the book, she also earned a Grammy Award for Best Spoken Word Recording. Trying to promote the book proved difficult since most of the media preferred to ask her about the Whitewater scandal. The scandal concerned some land in Arkansas the Clintons had purchased when Bill was governor. The man they bought the land from, Jim McDougal, was under investigation. He was ultimately convicted for financial wrongdoing in another business venture and tried to bargain for a lesser charge by implicating the Clintons. Although McDougal’s efforts failed, the Clintons’ association with him was investigated by the Office of Independent Counsel (OIC), a new office that was formed because of the Whitewater investigation. The investigation began when Hillary refused to give her and Bill’s financial records to a Washington Post reporter investigating the story. She did not think their personal finances Senator Christopher Bond holds a chart involving First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton’s Rose Law Firm billing records during a hearing of the Senate Whitewater Committee on May 8, 1996.
were anyone else’s concern. The OIC later ordered her to turn over the records to their investigators. The man in charge of the OIC was Ken Starr, a lawyer who admitted to having ties to the Republican Party, a fact that angered Hillary for its appearance of bias. The lengthy investigation cost millions and was criticized for leaking its findings regularly to the press. In another first for a First Lady, Hillary was subpoenaed to testify before a grand jury, which questioned her possible mishandling of her financial records. She answered each question and found the entire experience humiliating, as she later told presidential adviser George Stephanopoulos. She said, “Whenever I go out and fight I get vilified, so I have just learned to smile and take it. I go out there and say ‘Please, kick me again and insult me some more.’ You have to be much craftier behind the scenes, but just smile.”48
Monica Lewinsky The Whitewater investigation continued but ultimately found no proof of wrongdoing by the Clintons. The OIC eventually expanded its investigation to include other possible illegal activities of President and Mrs. Clinton. One example was the unsubstantiated rumor that had existed ever since Bill Clinton was governor that he had covered up the existence of extramarital affairs and continued to do so even as president. During Bill’s second term, he was accused of having an affair with Monica Lewinsky, a young White House intern. The president testified under oath that he did not have an affair. Starr tried to utilize Lewinsky’s statements, secretly taped by her friend, Linda Tripp, to prove the president lied under oath. The pressure on Lewinsky, the president, his administration, and especially his family during this time was intense. Unlike the previous accusations of infidelity, the Lewinsky scandal did not go away. When the pressure increased, the president admitted to the affair. Hillary was devastated by the admission and seriously considered a divorce. Ultimately she turned again to spiritual advisers as she had done throughout her life. The problems in the relationship would be dealt with privately, but publicly she would help her husband keep his job.
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Impeachment In December 1998 the House of Representatives voted to impeach President Clinton. According to the U.S. Constitution, articles of impeachment are voted on in the House and then if approved, go to the Senate for a vote to convict the president. Two articles were passed in the House charging the president with lying under oath and obstructing justice, both related to the Lewinsky affair. Shortly after the Lewinsky story appeared in the media, Hillary kept a previously scheduled appearance on the morning news show Today. When asked about the accusations she said, “The great story here . . . is the vast right-wing conspiracy that has been conspiring against my husband.”49 From then on the phrase, vast right-wing conspiracy, was used to mock Hillary. Any criticism of the Clintons was often followed by the prediction that Hillary would claim the criticism was a result of a vast right-wing conspiracy. Hillary was devastated by her husband’s affair but stood by him, in spite of increasingly personal and nasty newspaper headlines.
The Senate argued over the impeachment charges until February 12, 1999. At that time, the vote was taken and the conviction against President Clinton failed to garner enough votes. Although he was the first elected president to be impeached, his presidency was spared. The Clintons’ marriage was affected by the scandal as they considered first a divorce and then later a marriage counselor. During the scandal, Hillary defended her husband but was no longer on speaking terms with him.
In the End Not all of Hillary’s experiences in her husband’s second term were demeaning. She still managed to play the role of American hostess to the world via the front gates of the White House and to write two more best-selling books. She also hosted the White House’s first conference for child care in 1997. She helped renovate the White House for the first time in fifty years and launched a state-of-the-art White House Web site for virtual tours and international conferencing. One of the First Lady’s proudest achievements was in the preservation of America’s past. She helped preserve and restore the original flag Francis Scott Key wrote about in “The Star Spangled Banner” as well as other important historical artifacts. She continued to advocate for children and was voted the most admired woman in America in several polls by the end of her husband’s term. As for Bill’s legacy, the American people showed their admiration for him and his wife’s work despite the scandals. He left office with the highest poll rating of any retiring president. This was due to the economy being the strongest in history, the budget going from a huge deficit to a big surplus, welfare being reformed, crime lowered, and the largest amount of land protected and preserved. In spite of not enacting significant health care reform as well as her run-ins with the press and the various scandals, Hillary Rodham Clinton left the White House a stronger, more evolved public figure than she had entered it. Her lessons were learned and as the next election year approached, she would break again with tradition to test the limits of progressive thinking more than ever before.
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Chapter 5 Casting Her Own Shadow
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fter leaving the White House, Hillary Clinton chose to step out from her husband’s shadow and cast her own shadow in the public spotlight. Taking the valuable lessons learned from her experiences in her husband’s campaigns, she continued to improve her political knowledge, but this time she would be the candidate.
Run, Hillary, Run! The positive poll numbers the Clintons received as they were leaving the White House did not last long. Just days before leaving the White House, President Clinton authorized several executive pardons, including one for controversial fugitive financier Marc Rich, who had fled the country after being charged with tax fraud. The Clintons also left the White House with several gifts from supporters, such as rare artwork and a Mickey Mantle baseball card. They eventually returned the gifts because of a public outcry. Many people thought the Clintons had no right to keep gifts meant for the White House. Before any of this took place, Hillary received an amazing offer while still First Lady. Democratic New York senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan, who held office for almost three decades, announced in 1998 that he would retire when his current term ended in 2001. The announcement sent the Democratic Party into a frenzy of activity as they searched for a candidate who would
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help them keep the long-held position. Possibilities included everyone from local politicians in New York to high-profile individuals like John F. Kennedy Jr. While Bill’s impeachment trial was going on in Congress, Hillary was approached by several Democratic Party leaders to run for Moynihan’s seat. They believed that the Republican candidate would be popular New York mayor Rudy Giuliani, which meant they would need an equally well-known candidate. On the day Bill Clinton was acquitted in Congress, Hillary watched the proceedings on TV while conducting a meeting with White House adviser Harold Ickes to discuss the pros and cons of running for the Senate. Almost all of Hillary’s closest advisers tried to talk her out of it, even though she and Bill had already decided they would retire in New York. They established their residency by buying a home in the Westchester County, New York, suburb of Chappaqua. Hillary, however, continued to think about whether to run for several more months. Bill supported the idea of running. He said, “I am very grateful that now my wife has a chance to do what I thought she ought to do twenty-six years ago when we finished law school.”50 Ultimately Hillary’s decision was spiritually based. She received a letter from Arkansas priest Father George Tribou, whom she had befriended years before. The letter said in part, It is my opinion that on Judgment Day the first question God asks is not about the Ten Commandments. [. . .] but what He asks each of us is this: WHAT DID YOU DO WITH THE TIME AND THE TALENTS I GAVE YOU? . . . Those who feel you are not up to handling the hostile New York press and the taunts of your opponents fail to realize that, having been tried in the fire, you can handle anything. . . . Bottom line: run Hillary run! My prayers will be with you all the way.51
Making It Official Beginning the next week, Hillary made several appearances to officially announce her candidacy for the New York Senate race. The first appearance took place on the grounds of Senator Moyni-
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han’s upstate New York farm in the presence of Moynihan, his wife, Liz, and countless members of the worldwide media. In her announcement, Hillary stated, Some people are asking why I’m doing this here and now. That’s a fair question. Here’s my answer—and why I hope you’ll put me to work for you: I may be new to the neighborhood. But I’m not new to your concerns. . . . For over thirty years, in many different ways, I’ve seen firsthand the kind of challenges New Yorkers face today. I care about the same issues you do. I do understand them. I can make progress on them.52 Hillary’s statement underscored what she knew she would face during the campaign. Because she was from out of state, she knew some people would call her a carpetbagger, a criticism from the post–Civil War era of northerners who moved to the South to In 2000 Hillary Rodham Clinton announced her plans to run for U.S. senator from New York, citing the need for improved public education and health care.
change the laws during Reconstruction. It has since been used just as negatively to describe a politician who establishes residency in an area just to seek public office. Hillary addressed the issue of being a carpetbagger throughout the campaign by stating, “What I’m for is maybe as important, if not more important, than where I’m from.”53
The Listening Tour Hillary’s opponent did indeed turn out to be Mayor Giuliani. He wasted no time in referring to Hillary as a carpetbagger who knew nothing about the diverse and outspoken populace of New York. Hillary was advised by her campaign staff to spend as much time A sign protesting a campaign appearance by Hillary in upstate New York. Largely conservative, upstate New York was considered a waste of time by Clinton’s advisers, but eventually helped win her the race.
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in New York City as possible so New Yorkers could get to know her better. She did campaign in New York City, often in the company of New York’s other senator, Democrat Chuck Schumer. However, against the advice of much of her staff, she chose to also campaign as much as possible in upstate New York. Largely conservative, upstate was considered a waste of time by her advisers. Hillary chose to campaign in the region with what she called the Listening Tour, where she met with small groups of local citizens and talked with them about what was important in their lives. The kickoff event was in Westchester County, where she promised to visit all sixty-two counties in the state of New York, which no candidate had ever done before. She reminded the crowd that it would be a brutal campaign with rehashes of scandals from the past eight years. She closed by adding in a purposely fake New York accent, “I know it’s not going to be an easy campaign, but hey, dis is New Yawk.”54 When the Listening Tour began, Hillary was way behind in the polls. There were also several statements and events that early on had a negative effect. One example was that as First Lady, she was required to meet and greet many famous dignitaries. When she met Suha Arafat, the wife of Palestine Liberation Organization leader Yasir Arafat, she was photographed kissing her as a matter of protocol. This did not sit well with many of the Jewish voters in New York who considered Arafat a terrorist who wanted to abolish the Jewish state of Israel. Early in the campaign, Hillary found herself apologizing or defending much of what she did.
A Whole New Race As the Listening Tour progressed and Hillary’s campaign skills improved, the polls began to show a seesaw effect. One day Hillary would be up a few points, and the next day Giuliani would be slightly ahead. The polls were also showing the same effect in the Republican stronghold of upstate as Hillary kept her promise to visit every county in New York. The campaign was in full swing when Rudy Giuliani surprised his supporters by dropping out of the race in May 2000. The reason he gave was that he had prostate cancer, but it also became
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known that his wife was divorcing him in what amounted to another public scandal. Hillary chose not to comment on the events in Giuliani’s life and wished him a speedy recovery. Giuliani’s replacement was fairly young, very competitive, Long Island congressman Rick Lazio. He launched his campaign with a letter-writing campaign to Republican voters to raise money. He wrote, “It won’t take me six pages to convince you to send me an urgently needed contribution for my United States Senate campaign in New York. It would only take six words. I’m running against Hillary Rodham Clinton.”55 Hillary was so disliked by Republicans that Lazio received over $40 million in donations from around the country. Not to be outdone, Hillary responded immediately to Lazio’s letter-writing campaign. She said, “My opponent says you only need to know six words about him: ‘I’m running against Hillary Rodham Clinton.’ Well, I think you need to know seven words to vote for me. How about jobs, education, environment, choice, health and Social Security?”56 The two candidates debated each other three times during the campaign. At one point during the first Hillary Rodham Clinton and opponent Rick Lazio debated each other three times during the New York senatorial race.
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debate, Lazio walked over to Hillary’s podium and asked her to sign a statement concerning campaign contributions. He assumed that by getting into Hillary’s physical space, he would shake up her demeanor. Hillary kept her cool and Lazio returned to his own podium on the other side of the stage. The next day, the overnight polls showed Lazio’s aggressive act made him seem like a bully, and it hurt his campaign, as Hillary scored much higher numbers than before. Lazio was much more subdued in the other debates, but the damage to his campaign was done. When Hillary was asked if she wanted to punch Lazio in the nose during the first debate, she brushed off the question and said, “The thing that probably prepared me best in dealing with things like that was having two younger brothers.”57
The Harriet Tubman Speech
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hen Hillary Clinton ran for U.S. senator from New York, one of the many criticisms against her was her lack of charisma in giving a speech. Reporter Beth Harpaz refutes that claim as an eyewitness to Hillary’s speech at an African American Church in New York. She heard Hillary’s voice rise dramatically with the crowd’s enthusiasm as she recounted the following story of former slave and Underground Railroad founder, Harriet Tubman. Harriet Tubman is one of my favorite heroines in American history. Because when she got to freedom, she didn’t say, “Well, I’m free. I’m just gonna sit back and live the good life.” Did she? She decided to go back to the South and bring more escaped slaves to freedom. She’d tell people to meet her at night in a swamp or a grove of willow trees. And she’d say, “If you hear the dogs, keep going! If you hear the gunfire, keep going!” We all have to keep going until we are a just nation. But I need your help. And if you help me, I will be there for you! Quoted in Beth Harpaz, The Girls in the Van: Covering Hillary. New York: St. Martin’s, 2001, pp. 190–92.
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Election Night Hillary campaigned vigorously in New York throughout the rest of the year while still managing her duties as first lady. These included organizing and hosting a massive reception at the White House for the fiftieth anniversary of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), an organization of national governments that works together to promote democracy. The details of such an event were tremendous since every major world leader would be in attendance and proper protocol had to be followed precisely. She also hosted several major events to usher in the new millennium. Hillary showed stamina and continued her double duty as the nation’s First Lady and New York’s Democratic senatorial candidate. On election night in November 2000, Hillary and her staff thought she might barely win the race. When the results came in, she had won by much larger numbers than anyone had predicted, including big wins in the upstate New York counties that usually vote Republican. Her strategy paid off. By campaigning upstate and remaining focused on the issues that mattered to New Yorkers, she became the state’s first female senator. She accepted the outcome graciously and with good humor. She spoke to her supporters that night and said, Sixty-two counties, sixteen months, three debates, two opponents, and six black pantsuits later, because of you, we are here. You came out and said issues and ideals matter. Jobs matter, downstate and upstate. The environment matters. Social Security matters. A woman’s right to choose matters. It all matters, and I just want to say, from the bottom of my heart, thank you, New York.58
The Junior Senator from New York Hillary was sworn in on January 3, 2001, and for the next seventeen days she was a senator and the First Lady at the same time. She and her husband were back on speaking terms by the time she was sworn in, and they were getting along better than they had for some time. Bill let it be known how he felt watching Vice
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Senator Clinton became the first New York senator to become chair of the Senate’s powerful Armed Services Committee. Here, she talks with army surgeon general Kevin Kiley on Capitol Hill. President Al Gore administer the oath of office to Hillary. He said, “I was so excited I almost jumped over the railing.”59 After her orientation period, Hillary kept a low profile in the Senate and built important relationships with Democratic and Republican senators alike. She again made history when she was named the chair of the Senate’s powerful Armed Services Committee, responsible for the oversight of the military. She was the first New York senator to ever hold that position. Hillary also wasted no time in fulfilling her promises to New Yorkers. She fought to get tax breaks for businesses that would move to her state, and although it took time to succeed, the unemployment rate in upstate New York dropped considerably. She also led a bipartisan effort to bring broadband Internet access to rural communities. When asked during her first year in office how she felt about choosing public service, her answer was philosophical. She said in part,
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Choosing public service is a very personal decision and no one can make it for you. You have to look deep inside yourself and examine your motives, and think hard about what you would do to make a difference. Then you have to be willing to subject yourself to a very tough and sometimes mean-spirited political environment. But I can tell you, from the heart, it’s worth it.60
September 11, 2001 On September 11, 2001, terrorists crashed airliners into the World Trade Center in New York, the Pentagon in Virginia, and a field in Pennsylvania. It was the worst attack on U.S. soil in American history. When the smoke cleared, thousands of people were dead. Although only nine months into her term as New York’s senator, Hillary Clinton was deeply involved in the relief effort. Along with Senator Chuck Schumer, she successfully lobbied Congress for federal aid and secured over $21 billion to fund the destroyed World Trade Center’s site clean-up, aid for survivors, and victims’ families. She also issued two studies about the tragedy. One examined the disbursement of funds to local communities and the other explored the effects of the crisis on the survivors, families, and emergency workers who responded during and after the tragedy. On the Armed Services Committee, she supported U.S. military action in Afghanistan in the belief that Osama bin Laden, the man responsible for September 11, could be found there. In spite of her hard work to help New York deal with the tragedy, Hillary still encountered negative feedback. At an allstar concert held at New York’s Madison Square Garden to honor the police, fire, and emergency workers who heroically sacrificed themselves, audience members soundly booed Hillary when she took the stage. They may not have been aware of the work she was doing on their behalf in the Senate as she was less high profile than Mayor Giuliani, who was applauded by the crowd. Regardless of the reception from the audience, Hillary raised her voice above the noise, introduced the next act, and quickly left the stage.
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A Rarely Seen Side
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atrick Halley was Hillary Clinton’s advance man for nearly ten years, setting up publicity appearances for her. In his book, On the Road with Hillary, he recounts a story of a political rally in New York in which he witnessed a side to her that few people have ever seen. Halley writes: Hillary as might be expected, delivered a rousing speech and left the stage as one of those irresistible old Motown hits blared on the sound system. Backstage Hillary started dancing to the music and swinging her hips. A bunch of us joined her. Just as we were really getting down with our bad selves, a Secret Service agent tapped me on the shoulder and pointed to the Jumbotron. There was the First Lady of the United States, forty feet tall and in living color, boogying on the streets of New York with her staff. What to do? We couldn’t just stop and slink away. Hillary, exhibiting her quick wits and stage presence, smiled and waved to the camera as if the whole thing had been planned, and we retreated to the motorcade with our heads held high. Patrick S. Halley, On the Road with Hillary. New York: Viking, 2002, pp. 164–65.
The Senate’s Rising Star Various legislation and committee appointments kept Hillary active and productive throughout her term, winning her begrudging respect from former opponents of her husband’s administration. In 2005 she worked with Clinton administration opponent and former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich to propose eventual universal health care. Another Republican, Majority Leader Bill Frist, worked with Hillary to legislate the updating of hospital records to computers, in order to ease the burden and cost on patients and hospital staff.
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Although her attempt to reform health care failed when she was First Lady, it was still a priority for her as a senator. “All that we have learned in the last decade confirms that our goal should continue to be what every other industrialized nation has achieved,” she said, “health care that’s always there for every citizen.”61 By 2006 she easily won reelection with one of the largest majorities in New York history. She had become one of the most high-profile and accessible members of the U.S. Senate. She continued to work consistently for the rights of families, children, and working parents, as well as to make incremental improvements in the health care system whenever possible. In spite of her improved reputation for working with opposing senators, her greatest struggles in the Senate were with the administration of President George W. Bush. She challenged his policies whenever possible since many of the changes her husband enacted as president were being overturned by Bush. She was unsuccessful, however, because the Republicans held the majority in the Senate and she could not rally enough votes to overturn Bush’s decisions. Following the Democratic Party’s defeats in the presidential elections of 2000 and 2004, party leaders approached her to run in the next presidential election. She gave it serious soul-searching consideration and prepared to make her decision by January 2007.
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Chapter 6 A Presidential Race Like No Other
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lthough all U.S. presidential elections are unique in their own way, the presidential race of 2008 may be the most amazing of all. The reasons are varied, such as the diversity of the candidates, including early front-runner Hillary Rodham Clinton. What also made the race so compelling were the assumptions that seemed to change on a daily basis. It was an exciting race for all involved, and the ultimate outcome surprised even the most experienced political veterans, including Hillary Clinton herself.
Official Announcement Clinton officially announced her presidential candidacy in January 2007 in a webcast. It was an early indication of how different the race would be since no candidate had ever before announced his or her candidacy over the Internet. Clinton invited viewers to join her on her journey to renew America’s promise and also partially explained her reason for running. She said, “You know, after six years of George Bush, it is time to renew the promise of America. Our basic bargain that no matter who you are or where you live, if you work hard and play by the rules, you can build a good life for yourself and your family.”62 Her reference to then President George W. Bush was a major factor in her decision to run. When her husband was president, he left office with the American economy strong and the federal
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Hillary Clinton officially launched her presidential candidacy as a webcast on her Web site. budget with a surplus. As a senator, Clinton fought unsuccessfully against many of the Bush Administration’s changes, such as the new federal deficit and concern about the growing downturn of the economy. Although Senator Clinton had voted to approve President Bush’s request to go to war in Iraq, she was one of the first public figures to question the president’s tactics when the war seemed to go on longer than expected. In 2003 she responded to the administration’s attacks against her criticism by stating, “I’m sick and tired of people who say that if you debate and disagree with this administration, somehow you’re not patriotic. We need to stand up and say we’re Americans, and we have the right to debate and disagree with any administration.”63
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The Front-Runner in a Diverse Field Clinton’s clashes with the Bush administration continued even after she announced her candidacy. Many observers felt her wellknown persona made her the natural front-runner in the race, and she led in almost all the early polls. Clinton formed a staff made up of advisers from her husband’s political staff and members of her own trusted staff from Hillaryland. They created a strategy based largely on the sense that the race was hers to lose. The other candidates vying for the Democratic nomination were still unknown and speculated on, with the greatest concern for Hillary’s camp being that either former Vice President Al Gore might run or that former Senator John Edwards from North Carolina would join the race. Gore never entered the race, but Edwards did. So did former Clinton Administration cabinet member and Hispanic New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson. By February Senators Joe Biden and Chris Dodd were in, as well as a forty-five-year-old African American senator from Illinois named Barack Obama. The candidates vying for the Democratic presidential nomination included, from left, former senator Mike Gravel, Senator Chris Dodd, former senator John Edwards, Senator Hillary Clinton, Senator Barack Obama, Governor Bill Richardson, Senator Joe Biden, and Representative Dennis Kucinich.
On the Republican side, the announced candidates included former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney, former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, and seventy-two-year-old Arizona Senator John McCain. The diversity of the candidates was historic for a race that in the past had only seen white, middle-aged, male candidates.
More Surprises There were other surprises in store for those involved in and following the presidential race. Traditionally the first state races for the primary vote are held in Iowa and New Hampshire, with the other state races occurring throughout the year. Since party leaders in other states felt that early wins in New Hampshire and Iowa often boosted a candidate’s chances, several of them, including New York, California, and Nevada, chose to move up their states’ races closer to the beginning of the year to make themselves more competitive. Florida and Michigan scheduled their Democratic primaries so close to the beginning of the year that party chairman Howard Dean decided to penalize them for causing greater chaos during an already chaotic primary season. He stripped them of their delegates and asked the declared candidates to remove their names from the two states’ ballots. The popularity of the Internet was also a new factor. In the past candidates had campaigned and raised funds via events and television ads. For the first time, all the declared candidates had set up Web sites for regular webcasts, issue-related blogs, and fundraising efforts. Clinton utilized the new technology for all these things, and it proved to be very beneficial to her campaign.
The Debates Begin In the spring of 2007, the Democratic Party candidates began a series of public debates in different venues throughout the country. Since Clinton was the most well known, had raised the most money, and garnered the most media attention, the other candidates often attacked her during the debates to draw a difference between themselves and her.
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For many of these debates, Clinton remained above the fray and came off to many observers as the most presidential of the candidates. She largely avoided attacking the other Democratic candidates, focusing instead on the Republican candidates as if she would be the one to run against one of them in the general election. In an early debate Barack Obama said that as president he would be willing to meet unconditionally with foreign leaders critical of America, such as Hugo Chávez of Venezuela and Raúl Castro of Senator Hillary Clinton answers a question during the Democratic presidential primary debate in Manchester, New Hampshire. Many of the other candidates focused their attacks on her during the debates, but she did not attack back; instead, she focused her attention on the Republican candidates.
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Cuba. Clinton responded to Obama’s statement. She said in part, “I thought that was very irresponsible and frankly naive to say you would meet with Chavez and Castro or others within the first year.”64 Her comment showed her to be experienced in foreign affairs while portraying Obama as well meaning but ineffectual. As late as October 2007, Clinton held a firm lead in the national polls and her supporters considered her to be unstoppable.
The Turning Tide Early in the campaign, Clinton’s camp began to shows signs of impending crisis. Her staff was devoted to their cause but the differing personalities began to clash. The candidate often found herself trying to keep the peace instead of organizing strategy. Clinton herself, admittedly not a polished speaker or a naturally talented politician like her husband, was also not sure what role her husband should play in her campaign. He was still very well liked but his presence in the campaign risked drawing attention away from her. At a huge rally, a journalist covering Clinton’s campaign observed this dilemma firsthand. She writes, In Iowa in July 2007. . . Hillary finally brought out her husband like a secret weapon. Clearly making enormous efforts not to overshadow her, like a friendly Great Dane on a short lease, Bill constrained his humble introduction to nine minutes and thereafter literally kept his head down—seating himself on a three-legged stool about ten inches high. . . . After the Des Moines rally, while both Clintons signed T-shirts and baseballs, it was Bill who collected the noticeably larger crowd. For Hillary, her husband’s conspicuously greater popularity is humiliating, his little-ole-me routine on stage perhaps even more so.65 Another problem that arose was Clinton’s Senate vote approving the Iraq War. The other candidates, such as Joe Biden, Chris Dodd, and John Edwards publicly apologized for their vote to approve the war and said it was a mistake. Barack Obama was not in the U.S. Senate at the time of the Iraq War vote, but he said
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he was the only candidate against the war from the beginning. Clinton steadfastly refused to apologize for her vote. She chose instead to blame President Bush for leading herself and others to believe that starting the war was the proper course of action. At rallies, the issue came up constantly during question-andanswer sessions, even among her supporters. At one point a gentleman asked Clinton, “I want to know if right here, right now, once and for all and without nuance, you can say that war authorization was a mistake. . . . Until we hear you say it, we’re not going to hear all the other great things you are saying.”66 She maintained her composure and repeated her statement that the president was wrong, not her vote. There were strategic mistakes made as well. Although her campaign was bringing in record-breaking donations, not much of that money was being spent on early states, such as Iowa and New Hampshire. The other candidates poured their time, money, and energy into Iowa on a regular basis and polls showed her in a virtual three-way tie with Edwards and Obama. Many of these strategies were fought over by her staff, and the decision was finally made to campaign vigorously in Iowa. Her One of Hillary Clinton’s dilemmas during the campaign was the role that her husband should play. At a rally in Iowa, Bill introduced her and then sat on a stool as she spoke in an effort not to overshadow her.
campaign proceeded to spend an incredible amount of money there setting up rallies, conducting polls, and buying TV time that ultimately cost over $100 million.
The Youth Vote and Technology While Clinton’s presidential campaign appeared to be doing fine on the surface, other elements were chipping away at her substantial lead. She maintained her presence on the Internet but otherwise continued a traditional campaign of in-person and television appearances. Other candidates did the same. Barack Obama, however, chose a less traditional path. Obama was well versed in modern technology trends, and his campaign was well organized in utilizing them. It was another new twist on the presidential campaign trail. The constituents Obama was looking to energize, the youth of America, had historically been the least motivated of all voters, but they were the most technologically savvy members of the population. In an article in the Washington Post, columnist E.J. Dionne Jr. sums up the situation. He writes, “Since the late 1960s, the same chorus has been heard from election to election: The young don’t care. They’re disengaged. They’re too wrapped up in their music, their favorite sports and their parties to take an interest in politics.” Dionne also writes that the war in Iraq, the eroding environment, and the highest teen unemployment rate in sixteen years could change all that. Dionne concluded that “the evidence is overwhelming that this year the young really will vote in large numbers—and they just might tip the election.”67
The Iowa Caucus In order to be the Democratic Party’s nominee for president, a candidate must win 2,117 delegates. Each state has a different number of delegates, and some states hold primaries to decide the winner. Delegates are allotted in primaries based on the votes earned from the outcome of the election. Some states, such as Iowa, hold caucuses in which volunteers try to convince registered voters who show up at the caucus in
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Pioneering Women Politicians
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n 2006 Newsweek published a time line of female politicians who laid the groundwork for women in the political arena. They are: Elizabeth Cady Stanton (1866): The first woman to run for the House of Representatives. Although she was not eligible to vote [until 1920], she received 24 out of 12,000 votes as an independent from New York. Victoria Woodhull (1872): The first woman nominated as a presidential candidate (on the Equal Rights Party ticket). Jeannette Rankin (1917): Represented Montana’s Second District and was the first woman to serve in either chamber of Congress. Only lawmaker to vote against U.S. entry into both World Wars. Hattie Wyatt Caraway (1932): Appointed a senator after the death of her husband in late 1931. She ran for the seat in 1932 and became the first woman elected to the Senate, serving two terms. Margaret Chase Smith (1964): The first woman to have her name placed in nomination for president at a major party convention and to serve in both houses of Congress. Shirley Chisholm (1968): The first African American woman elected to Congress, she served New York’s Twelfth District. In ‘72 she became the first black to seek the presidency. Geraldine Ferraro (1984): The first female Democratic vice presidential nominee when chosen by presidential candidate Walter Mondale. Carol Moseley Braun (1992): The Illinois native defeated the incumbent in the Democratic primary and won the general election to become the first African American woman in the U.S. Senate. Nancy Pelosi (2007): California’s Eighth District representative was voted by Congress to become the first female Speaker of the House.
Newsweek, December 25, 2006, pp. 30–40.
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the dead of winter to vote for their candidate. At the end of the day, a head count is taken of the various groups. Volunteers are key in getting voters to show up, and Obama’s impressive youth workers did just that. When the Iowa caucus was held on January 3, 2008, Barack Obama won with 37.6 percent of the vote. John Edwards took second with 29.8 percent, and Hillary Clinton placed third with 29.5 percent. Clinton was understandably upset at the loss and said as much during her regular strategy conference call to her staff the next morning. The usually argumentative staff was awkwardly silent when Hillary asked for reasons for the loss. A few mumbled about the amazing youth voter turnout but mostly the silence continued. Clinton angrily said, “This has been a very instructive call, talking to myself,”68 and hung up.
New Hampshire The surprises and crises were not over for the Clinton campaign. The last minute deluge of money into Iowa had left the campaign practically broke and with the other state elections quickly moving up on the calendar, a crisis had indeed set in. New Hampshire’s primary was just three days after Iowa, and the pressure of trying to catch up was beginning to show in Clinton’s public appearances. National polls showed Clinton still ahead of Obama, but in New Hampshire, polls predicted a big win for Obama. Clinton’s national lead would dwindle dramatically unless she could win an early state so momentum could build. That scenario seemed less likely as New Hampshire’s primary approached. The day before the January 8 primary, Clinton was campaigning nonstop around the state when a diner patron put a question to her that seemed to give her pause. The sixty-five-year-old woman asked the candidate, “As a woman . . . how do you do it?”69 TV cameras caught Clinton apparently choke up and give an almost inaudible reply. The following day, New Hampshire Democrats went to the polls. The turnout proved to be another surprise. Clinton won New Hampshire with 39 percent to Obama’s 36 percent. Clinton’s slim victory was an amazing achievement. Back in the game, Clinton told her supporters, “I want to especially thank New
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Hillary Clinton waves during a post-primary rally in New Hampshire. Despite polls predicting that Obama would win New Hampshire, Clinton won the primary with 39 percent of the vote. Hampshire. Over the last week, I listened to you and in the process, I found my own voice.”70
The Media and the Candidate After her come-from-behind victory in New Hampshire, Clinton’s enthusiasm was short lived. Many in the media said her victory was based on breaking down in the diner which made voters feel sorry for her. For Clinton, it was a daily battle with the media to get her message across while the media itself concentrated on other aspects of her persona. In Iowa, National Public Radio reported that she
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had eaten in a diner and not left a tip for the waitress. The waitress was interviewed and said, “You people are really nuts. There’s kids dying in the war, the price of oil . . . there’s better things to think about than who served Hillary Clinton at Maid-Rite and who got a tip and who didn’t get a tip.”71
Super Tuesday The next big primary was in South Carolina, and as in Iowa, several advisers implored Clinton to skip the state and focus her attention elsewhere. She did and it may have been the reason Obama won the state with 55 percent to Clinton’s paltry 26 percent. Making matters worse was Clinton’s lack of campaign funds. The overspent money in Iowa and New Hampshire forced her to lend the campaign $5 million of her own money. February 5, 2008, was dubbed Super Tuesday because twentytwo states held their primaries that day and the winner would likely be the party’s nominee. The results once again surprised most observers. Dodd, Biden, Richardson, and Edwards were now out of the race, and Obama won in thirteen states. Clinton, however, won eight of the biggest delegate-rich states, such as California, New York, Massachusetts, and New Jersey. The twists and surprises continued. The next eleven primaries were won by Obama which finally put him ahead of Clinton in the delegate count. Party leaders began to publicly pressure Clinton to get out of the race so the party would not be divided in November against Republican nominee John McCain. Many high-profile Democrats endorsed Obama, such as Massachusetts Senator Edward Kennedy, who had been a longtime Clinton supporter and family friend.
Victory and Chaos By early March, Clinton’s staff continued to fight among themselves. The candidate herself remained unsure of how to deal with the infighting, and in an effort to make peace, she fired campaign manager Patti Solis Doyle. Clinton replaced her with longtime friend Maggie Williams, but the bickering continued.
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Hillary’s Presidential Campaign Manager efore the conflict that developed among her staff that forced Hillary Clinton to fire her campaign manager, Patti Solis Doyle, Doyle was named a 2007 Woman of Distinction by Hispanic Magazine. In the article “Latinas of Excellence,” Idy Fernandez writes,
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Patti Solis Doyle has earned a reputation in Washington as an adept fundraiser and effective Strategist. As campaign manager for Hillary Clinton for president, she is the first Hispanic woman to lead a bid for the White House. A longtime Clinton collaborator, Doyle met Sen. Clinton nearly sixteen years ago, when she became her chief scheduler in Arkansas. When the Clintons moved into the White House, Doyle came too, working as director of scheduling and advance for the first lady and later as an Assistant to the President of the United States. She went to work for Sen. Clinton’s 2000 election campaign becoming one of her most trusted advisors. In addition to generating campaign donations and developing the next move with Sen. Clinton, Doyle is behind the expensive but potentially risky financial strategy that has made Sen. Clinton one of the top fundraisers on the campaign trail. Idy Fernandez, “Latinas of Excellence,” Hispanic Magazine, May 2007, http://hol.his paniconline.com/Hispanic Mag/2007_5/ Feature -LEA.htm.
Hillary Clinton’s campaign manager Patti Solis Doyle.
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Her campaign then tried a negative approach with a new commercial. The implied message was that Obama would not be able to deal with a crisis as president and the result was unexpected wins for Clinton in Ohio and Texas. The celebration was short lived as the next day’s Washington Post ran a front-page story examining the internal fighting within the Clinton campaign. Attorney Robert Barnett, one of the Clintons’ oldest friends and advisers, sent an angry e-mail to her and her staff in response to the Post article. He wrote, “STOP IT!!!! I have held my tongue for weeks. After this morning’s WP story, no longer. This makes me sick. This circular firing squad that is occurring is unattractive, unprofessional, unconscionable, and unacceptable. . . . It must stop.”72
The Florigan Plan Much of the bickering within Clinton’s campaign was due to chief strategist Mark Penn, who was striving for a plan that he felt would reignite her chances. The Michigan and Florida primaries back in February had been nullified, but since Clinton had been one of the earliest candidates to declare, her name remained on the ballot. Penn suggested on March 10 that those delegates should count toward Clinton or at the very least that Clinton should demand a revote of the two states. This “Florigan” plan was debated until April when the Wall Street Journal printed an article that exposed Penn as a lobbyist for the Colombian government, favoring a free trade deal that Clinton opposed. She had no choice but to fire him as well. In late May, Clinton publicly stumped for the Florida and Michigan delegates but the press reported it as an act of desperation. Obama’s blowout victory in North Carolina effectively ended her campaign. On June 3 she suspended her campaign when Obama won the Montana primary and reached the magic number of 2,117 delegates.
“18 Million Cracks” In her concession speech to her supporters, Clinton endorsed Barack Obama and congratulated him on his victory in an effort to unify the Democratic Party for the general election. She reit-
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Hillary Clinton gestures to supporters as she suspends her campaign for president and endorses Barack Obama. erated her commitment in a speech that was as powerful as any she had ever given. She said, “Although we weren’t able to shatter that highest, hardest glass ceiling this time, thanks to you, it’s got about 18 million cracks in it.”73 Clinton proceeded to campaign for Obama and on November 4, 2008, he was elected the first African American president in U.S. history. Obama’s victory was an impressive one, but to some observers so was Clinton’s challenge. In his book, 40 More Years, political strategist and Clinton confidant James Carville writes, The most staggering achievement of the 2008 campaign, short of Obama’s fund-raising, was that Hillary came back from eleven defeats. . . . She performed much better than Obama in the later stages of the campaign. She did win, by most accounts, probably twenty-four out of twenty-six debates. A total of 18 million Americans voted for her.74 Her staggering achievement now in the history books, Clinton took a much-needed rest before returning to the U.S. Senate.
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Chapter 7
Madam Secretary
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fter he won the presidential election, Barack Obama immediately went to work filling his cabinet and other important positions. He asked Hillary Clinton to be secretary of state; she accepted, opening a new and exciting chapter in her life.
Why Hillary? As a candidate, Barack Obama promised that if he became president, he would include people with a broad range of ideologies in his cabinet. With this in mind, he kept George W. Bush’s secretary of defense, Robert Gates, on the job and made a former general, James Jones, the head of the National Security Council. He considered several high-profile individuals for secretary of state, including 2004 Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry and Nebraska’s Republican senator and Obama supporter Chuck Hagel before choosing Hillary Clinton because of her experience and reputation. Obama said, “She’s an American of tremendous stature who will have my complete confidence, who knows many of the world’s leaders, who will command respect in every capital, and who will clearly have the ability to advance our interests around the world.”75 When Obama offered her the position, Clinton claims that her first reaction was to suggest others who would be great secretaries of state. She said,
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He was quite persistent and very persuasive. And, you know, ultimately, it came down to my feeling that, number one, when your president asks you to do something for your country, you really need a good reason not to do it. Number two, if I had won and I had asked him to please help me serve our country, I would have hoped he would say yes. And, finally, I looked around our world and I thought, you know, we are in just so many deep holes that everybody had better grab a shovel and start digging out.76 President-elect Barack Obama introduces Hillary Clinton as his choice for secretary of state. She initially suggested others whom she felt would be more capable for the job, but ultimately accepted the position.
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The Everyday Hillary Clinton
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n her MySpace page, Hillary Clinton reveals some of her personal likes, dislikes, and everyday habits. They are:
Favorite food to cook: I’m a lousy cook, but I make pretty good soft scrambled eggs. Desert island necessity: A good book. Favorite reality TV program: American Idol. Favorite fitness activity: Speed walking. Worst habit: Chocolate. Sleeping-in time: I feel lucky when I can sleep until 7 a.m. Hidden talent: I love crossword puzzles. Last music purchase: Carly Simon’s Into White. Cars you drive: For security reasons, we drive in Secret Service vehicles but the Service lets us use a Ford hybrid when we’re home in New York. Home task that needs tending: Organizing my closets. Last work of nonfiction read: Team of Rivals by Doris Kearns Goodwin. Pets at home: Seamus, our Lab. Best and worst grades or subjects in school: I always loved history and got good grades, but I never did well at math. Item that most reminds you of where you came from: Olive burgers from the Pickwick in Chicago. Hillary Rodham Clinton, “Hillary’s Interests,” MySpace, www.myspace.com/hillaryclinton.
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The deep holes she spoke of were the result of the previous administration’s foreign policy. She felt America’s image on the world stage had been diminished by the Bush Administration’s failure to resolve global problems that were either at crisis level or near the brink. These included the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan; the growing threat of nuclear arms in North Korea, Iran, and Pakistan; and the ongoing Middle East crisis between Israel and its Arab nation neighbors.
America’s Diplomat Clinton agreed to be Obama’s secretary of state and immediately went to work on the enormous task that lay before her. The nation’s first secretary of state was Thomas Jefferson during George Washington’s administration. Jefferson oversaw a chief clerk, three regular clerks, and a messenger, all with an annual budget of fiftysix thousand dollars. The State Department of the twenty-first century has a multimillion-dollar budget, embassies all over the world, and thousands of employees. Besides overseeing these responsibilities, the secretary of state is considered America’s top diplomat, the head of all U.S. embassies, fourth in line to the presidency, and answerable only to the president in matters of international diplomacy. It is an important and highly stressful job. One of the first things Clinton did to prepare for her new job was to meet all the living previous secretaries of state and get their input on how they did their job. Everyone from Henry Kissinger to Condoleezza Rice shared their valuable insights with Clinton. Clinton also immersed herself in the particulars of the troubled hot spots around the world to familiarize herself with what lay ahead. By also conferring with other incoming cabinet officials, she helped create a plan of action in conjunction with Barack Obama and his staff of national security advisers.
Smart Power Obama, Clinton, and a staff of national security advisers devised a strategy they eventually called smart power. Under smart power,
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the Obama administration considers the full range of tools that it has at its disposal to address every issue. These tools include political, cultural, economic, legal, diplomatic, and military tools. The challenge is selecting the right tool, or combination of tools, for each situation. To foster diplomacy, the decision was made to appoint special envoys to troubled regions of the world. They would answer to and confer with Clinton, who in turn would answer to the president. The first appointees were former senator George Mitchell, who is assigned to the Middle East, and Richard C. Holbrooke, who is assigned to Afghanistan and Pakistan. More would be named later. Clinton’s deputy secretary, Jim Steinberg, explains that this approach allows the secretary of state to remain informed while focusing on the administration’s overall goals. He said, “You don’t want the secretary to have to get down and do the nitty-gritty, get bogged down in the details. [This way] she doesn’t become such a prisoner of the crisis of the moment that she can’t advance a long-term agenda.”77
Mutual Respect Obama had his hands full dealing with his upcoming presidency, including setting up a long-term foreign policy agenda. He and Clinton agreed that Asia would receive top priority, China and Japan specifically. Clinton persuasively argued that the Bush administration allowed the Treasury Department to influence foreign policy, which is why the economy in the region is suffering. Much to the surprise of many observers, the President-elect and his secretary of state were often in agreement. Neither claimed to have a very close relationship with the other, but in spite of their past differences, they quickly established a strong working relationship based on mutual respect. They also managed to resolve a disagreement they had during the campaign. Obama had said he would be willing to meet unconditionally with some foreign leaders, and Clinton accused him of being naive. Now they agreed that Clinton and her staff would set the conditions for meetings between the president and foreign leaders.
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With his foreign policy agenda in place and a qualified team to implement it, Barack Obama confidently took the oath of office to become the forty-fourth president of the United States on January 20, 2009. Following her congressional confirmation hearing a few days earlier, Hillary Rodham Clinton was sworn in as the nation’s sixty-seventh secretary of state on January 21.
Her First Few Days State Department employees welcomed Hillary Clinton with thunderous applause when she entered the building on her first official day of work. She made a brief statement that received even greater applause and then she went right to work. During her first five days in office, she called almost forty different world leaders and conferred with them on various issues. She spoke briefly with the press later that week to explain the importance of the calls and the reaction she received from world Hillary Rodham Clinton is sworn in as the nation’s sixtyseventh secretary of state by Vice President Joseph Biden as her husband, daughter, and mother look on during a ceremony at the State Department.
leaders. She said, “There’s a great exhalation of breath going on around the world as people express their appreciation for the new direction that’s being set, and the team that’s put together by the president to carry out our foreign policy goals. . . . We have a lot of damage to repair.”78 Clinton was determined to repair what damage she could by putting in long hours in her high-security, seventhfloor office. The office was gently lit, wood paneled, and adorned with portraits of her predecessors on the walls. Clinton did not wish to repeat the mistake of letting her staff bicker among themselves, so she made a point of getting out of her office and checking in with the department’s different bureaus on a regular basis. It took time, but she established a balance with her office work, staff meetings, and her regular Thursday White House meetings with the president. The next major challenge to confront was traveling the world.
Her First Travels The United States is a member of several international diplomatic organizations, and as secretary of state, Clinton is responsible for maintaining relationships with the other members of these organizations. She must also work out the details when the president attends summits, such as the agenda for top level discussions, preconditions that need to be addressed before the president arrives, and a great deal more. These responsibilities mean Clinton travels quite a bit. Previous secretaries of state usually traveled to Europe or the Middle East as their maiden voyage. As agreed upon with the
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Secretary of State Hillary Clinton signs an agreement with Japan’s foreign minister Hirofumi Nakasone that would shift U.S. military forces from Okinawa to Guam in order to realign troops in the Pacific. president, however, Clinton began with the Far East. She arrived in Japan on February 15, 2009, on the first stop of her Asian tour. She met with Japan’s foreign minister and immediately worked out and signed the details of a treaty that would shift U.S. military forces from Okinawa to Guam as part of a realignment of troops in the Pacific. At the same time, North Korea announced that it would launch a nuclear missile test in the region in the near future. The United
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Secretary of State Hillary Clinton speaks with young students in Jakarta, Indonesia, on February 18, 2009. Clinton has gone out of her way to visit schools and workplaces, which has differentiated her from her predecessors.
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States and the international community have been attempting for years to negotiate with North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong-il, about ending North Korea’s nuclear arms program, but Kim Jong-il had not been seen in public for some time, leading to rumors that he is ill and that a change of leaders is in progress. Clinton commented on a possible change of leadership in North Korea and in doing so, broke an unspoken taboo in American diplomacy. No U.S. official had ever commented before on who might come after Kim Jong-il. The question then arose as to whether Clinton had made a beginner’s mistake or had purposely broken the taboo to end the diplomatic stalemate. The official responses from China, Japan, and South Korea, the nations in the region with the most at stake, proved her comments were no mistake. They welcomed the comments. Clinton also commented on North Korea’s nuclear program. She said, “The possible missile launch that North Korea is talking about would be very unhelpful in moving our relationship forward.”79
Her Own Voice After Japan the new secretary of state then traveled to Indonesia, South Korea, and China. At each stop, she fulfilled her duties, meeting with foreign dignitaries and taking care of official business. Unlike her predecessors, she also went out of her way to meet the general populace of the region in schools, offices, and other public venues as she had done when traveling as First Lady. Knowing the popularity of certain TV shows in Asia, she appeared as a guest on several of them and took questions from the audience via an interpreter. In Indonesia, the region’s most populated Muslim nation, Clinton answered reporters’ questions about the president’s recent speech in Egypt in which he sought to make amends with the Muslim world. When a reporter asked if the administration was focusing on Muslims at the expense of other religions, she responded curtly, “There is no pigeonholing; there is no exclusivity.” She also said, “We are reaching out to the entire world.”80 While visiting South Korea, Clinton hosted a roundtable discussion with reporters at a women’s college and proceeded to
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tackle questions concerning America’s new foreign policy. She highlighted the administration’s accomplishments in utilizing special envoys, including a new appointee assigned to global climate change. Many observers overseas and in the United States were surprised by the way she often visited schools and workplaces on her journey. Her answers solidified her own voice and exactly what made her different as secretary of state. She said, I think it is part of our toolbox for so-called smart power to be reaching out to people in a way that is not traditional and not confined by the ministerial meeting and the staged handshake photo. . . . That’s part of the job. But going into universities where the next generation is going to be thinking about their role and how they see the world and what they think of America. That is part of the message we’re trying to convey.81
Traveling On From February 28 through March 8, Hillary Clinton flew to the Middle East and several European nations. Reporters traveling with Clinton noted that while members of her staff slept, the secretary of state stayed up reading important briefings, portfolios, and books on the regions she was to visit. In Turkey Clinton appeared on television to answer journalists’ questions. In discussing her reasons for entering politics and her work with children and families, her natural persona came through as she warmly engaged the other journalists. Thanks in part to Clinton’s inaugural trip, America’s worldwide reputation as an aggressor was beginning to change.
The G20 Summit Clinton returned home briefly in March to attend several functions before traveling on yet again. In early April she returned to Europe for the G20 Summit, a meeting where twenty heads of state discuss pressing and ongoing global issues. The secretary of
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While in London for the G20 Summit in April 2009, President Barack Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton met with Chinese president Hu Jintao. Clinton was present with President Obama at several press conferences with world leaders. state met with her counterparts from other nations while President Obama met with the other nineteen world leaders. At several press conferences she was present when President Obama spoke in conjunction with world leaders with his secretary of state standing wordlessly behind him. During the summit, an interesting event took place. At a luncheon, Richard Holbrooke, the special envoy to Iran, managed to meet briefly with the Iranian diplomat and the two men met later
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The Offbeat Challenges of Diplomacy
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resident Barack Obama chose Hillary Clinton to be secretary of state due in large part to her experience in foreign affairs as first lady. The challenges of foreign policy are sometimes strange and, on occasion, offbeat. In her memoirs, Clinton recounts an incident from 1994 when she attended the inauguration of Nelson Mandela in South Africa. Also present was then Cuban leader Fidel Castro, who would later turn over leadership to his brother Raúl. At the time, Cuba and the United States did not have a diplomatic relationship, and the United States was still maintaining a trade embargo on Cuba. The First Lady, therefore, had been advised to avoid Castro at the inauguration. Clinton writes, One of my challenges that afternoon was Fidel Castro. The State Department briefers had warned me that Castro wanted to meet me. They told me to avoid him at all costs, since we had no diplomatic relations with Cuba, not to mention a trade embargo. “You can’t shake hands with him” they told me. “You can’t talk to him.” Even if I accidentally bumped into him, the anti-Castro factions in Florida would go wild. I frequently looked over my shoulder during the reception, watching for his bushy gray beard in the crowd of faces. In the middle of a fascinating conversation with somebody like King Mswati II of Swaziland, I’d suddenly spot Castro moving toward me, and I’d hightail it to a far corner of the room. It was ridiculous, but I knew that single photograph, stray sentence, or chance encounter could become news. Hillary Rodham Clinton, Living History. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2003, p. 235.
to discuss the possibility of beginning official talks between their two nations. Secretary Clinton encouraged the meeting since the protocol of her being top diplomat prevented her from meeting with the Iranian diplomat herself. Holbrooke’s position as special
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envoy allowed him to speak with his Iranian counterpart, which proved to be an example of smart power at work. According to Holbrooke, “For her to cross the room to greet him would have been odd.”82
Admitting Past Mistakes Hillary Clinton was proving herself to be a hardworking, diligent secretary of state in the eyes of the new president and the rest of the world. Several human rights groups criticized her, however, for having met with China’s leadership. China’s record on human rights is widely condemned, and Clinton met with the leadership anyway to discuss global warming. She stated that human rights could be dealt with when environmental issues have been addressed. She has also been surprisingly candid in admitting to America’s past mistakes in its foreign policy. This admission served to open the door to previously adversarial nations such as Cuba. The United States and Cuba ended diplomatic ties during President Kennedy’s administration, when Cuba had aligned itself with the Soviet Union. For more than four decades, an embargo of trade, travel, and communication has existed between the two nations that has never been lifted. When Cuban leader Raúl Castro publicly stated he would be willing to resume talks with the United States, the hopeful sign was met with optimistic caution. Secretary Clinton said, “We have seen Raúl Castro’s comments and we welcome this overture. We are taking a very serious look at it, and we will consider how we intend to respond.”83
Tough When Necessary Secretary Clinton has not been hesitant to make harsh public statements when she has felt the situation required it. The news that the Pakistan military was losing its fight with encroaching Taliban insurgents resulted in such a statement. Speaking before the House Foreign Affairs Committee in Washington, D.C., she discussed her recent trip to the region and her
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conversations with Pakistani leaders and ordinary citizens. She said, “I think that the Pakistani government is basically abdicating to the Taliban and to the extremists.” She also said, If you talk to people in Pakistan, especially in the ungoverned territories, which are increasing in number, they don’t believe the state has a judiciary system that works. It’s corrupt, it doesn’t extend its power into the countryside. So the government of Pakistan, however it is constituted, which is of course their business, not ours, must begin to deliver government services.”84 Her final comment was an attempt to procure more money for the region so important services could be provided to the people. It is part of President Obama’s plan to change America’s global reputation from a military power to a humanitarian one. The committee eventually approved the additional funds in late May 2009.
The Cuban Situation In early June 2009, Hillary Clinton traveled to Latin America to attend the Organization of American States (OAS) Summit. The organization consists of thirty-four Latin American nations and the United States. They meet annually to negotiate possible changes to their existing charter of rules and conditions. The major topic of discussion at this summit was the possible readmission of Cuba. The possibility seemed likely until the leadership of Venezuela and Nicaragua stubbornly refused to accept a condition proposed by the United States. It was the position of the United States that Cuba should have to petition the OAS for reentry into the organization as a gesture of good faith that it accepted the OAS charter. Cuba’s leadership said it really did not care one way or the other, but Nicaragua and Venezuela were adamant that the condition should be lifted. Secretary Clinton was equally adamant that the condition should stand. She said, “We believe that membership in the OAS comes with responsibility, and that we must all hold each other accountable.”85 She prepared to leave the summit tired and disappointed over the impending outcome. Upon informing President Obama, he
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Hillary Clinton arrives in Honduras for the Organization of American States (OAS) Summit. Secretary Clinton had laid the groundwork for Cuba’s readmission into the OAS. called the leaders of Brazil and other nations to remind them that the United States provides much economic support to their countries, and it might cease unless they could convince Nicaragua and Venezuela to back down. The next day Nicaragua and Venezuela backed down and Cuba was readmitted into the OAS after its long absence. Secretary Clinton had laid the groundwork
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for the momentous occurrence, and President Obama saw it through. In spite of the ongoing threats in the world, Hillary Rodham Clinton has successfully made her mark in the world of foreign policy as she has in other areas of endeavor. She may have made mistakes, but her willingness to learn to do better and to seek new opportunities has made her a successful player on the international stage. As Clinton stated during her confirmation hearings, “I don’t get up every morning thinking only about the threats and dangers we face. With every challenge comes an opportunity to find promise and possibility in the face of adversity and complexity. Today’s world calls forth the optimism and can-do spirit that has marked our progress for more than two centuries.”86
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Notes Introduction: Making the Impossible Possible 1. Hillary Rodham Clinton, Living History. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2003, p. 41. 2. Hillary Rodham Clinton, It Takes a Village: And Other Lessons Children Teach Us. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1996, pp. 317–18. 3. Eleanor Clift, “Suffrage Hillary Style,” Newsweek, January 5, 2009, p.109. 4. Quoted in Catherine Whitney, Nine and Counting: The Women of the Senate. New York: HarperCollins, 2001, p. 210. Chapter 1: In Her Time 5. Quoted in Clinton, Living History, p. 3. 6. Quoted in Gail Sheehy, “What Hillary Wants,” Vanity Fair, May 1992, p. 213. 7. Quoted in Carl Sferrazza Anthony, “Hillary Clinton: What I Hope to Do as First Lady,” Good Housekeeping, January 1993, p. 98. 8. Quoted in Kati Marton, Hidden Power: Presidential Marriages That Shaped Our Recent History. New York: Random House, 2001, p. 310. 9. Clinton, Living History, p. 4. 10. Quoted in Howard G. Chua-Eoan, Nina Burleigh, and Linda Kramer, “Power Mom,” People, January 25, 1993, p. 58. 11. Clinton, It Takes a Village, pp. 9–10. 12. Quoted in Clinton, Living History, p. 22. 13. Quoted in Chua-Eoan, Burleigh, and Kramer, “Power Mom,” p. 58. 14. Clinton, Living History, p. 18. 15. Clinton in Life, “The Class of ‘69,” June 20, 1969, p. 31. 16. Clinton, Living History, p. 40. Chapter 2: “Billary” 17. Clinton, Living History, p. 38.
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18. Quoted in Bill Clinton, My Life. New York: Knopf, 2004, p. 181. 19. Clinton, My Life, p. 182. 20. Clinton, My Life, p. 182. 21. Quoted in Eleanor Clift, “I Think We’re Ready,” Newsweek, February 3, 1992, p. 21. 22. Clinton, Living History, p. 71. 23. Quoted in Marton, Hidden Power, p. 310. 24. Quoted in Clinton, Living History, p. 74. 25. Clinton, Living History, pp. 77–78. Chapter 3: From State House to White House 26. Quoted in Elizabeth Sporkin and Margie Bonnett Sellinger, “Practical Chic,” People, January 25, 1993, p. 58. 27. Clinton, My Life, p. 73. 28. Clinton, It Takes a Village, p. 8. 29. Clinton, It Takes a Village, p. 7. 30. Clinton, Living History, p. 91. 31. Clinton, It Takes a Village, pp. 98–99. 32. Quoted in Anthony, “Hillary Clinton: What I Hope to Do as First Lady,” p. 99. 33. Clinton, Living History, p. 94. 34. Quoted in Sheehy, “What Hillary Wants,” p. 142. 35. George Stephanopoulos, All Too Human: A Political Education. New York: Little, Brown, 1999, pp. 91–92. Chapter 4: Hillaryland 36. Marton, Hidden Power, p. 319. 37. Clinton, My Life, p. 469. 38. Quoted in Frontline: The Clinton Years, directed by Brent E. Huffman and Katerina Monemvassitis, PBS Home Video, 2001. 39. Quoted in Margaret Carlson Washington, “An Interview with Hillary Rodham Clinton: ‘We’ve Had Some Good Times,’” Time, May 10, 1993, www.time.com/0,8816,978433,00.html. 40. Quoted in Clinton, My Life, p. 501. 41. Quoted in Clinton, My Life, p. 532.
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42. Bob Woodward, The Agenda: Inside the Clinton White House. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1994, p. 333. 43. Quoted in Marton, Hidden Power, p. 322. 44. Clinton, Living History, p. 190. 45. Clinton, Living History, pp. 32–33. 46. Madeleine Albright, Madam Secretary: A Memoir. New York: Miramax, 2003, p. 198. 47. Quoted in Susan Estrich, The Case for Hillary Clinton. New York: HarperCollins, 2005, p. 216. 48. Quoted in Marton, Hidden Power, p. 336. 49. Quoted in Frontline: The Clinton Years. Chapter 5: Casting Her Own Shadow 50. Quoted in Marton, Hidden Power, p. 346. 51. Quoted in Clinton, Living History, pp. 505–506. 52. Quoted in Whitney, Nine and Counting, p. 204. 53. Quoted in Beth J. Harpaz, The Girls in the Van: Covering Hillary. New York: St. Martin’s, 2001, p. 44. 54. Quoted in Patrick S. Halley, On the Road with Hillary. New York: Viking, 2002, p. 299. 55. Quoted in Whitney, Nine and Counting, p. 204. 56. Quoted in Harpaz, The Girls in the Van, p. 205. 57. Quoted in Harpaz, The Girls in the Van, p. 239. 58. Quoted in Whitney, Nine and Counting, pp. 206–207. 59. Quoted in Clinton, My Life, p. 945. 60. Quoted in Whitney, Nine and Counting, p. 210–11. 61. Quoted in Estrich, The Case for Hillary Clinton, p. 201. Chapter 6: A Presidential Race Like No Other 62. Quoted in Andrews McMeel, “Countdown to Victory: Hillary Clinton 16-month Presidential Calendar,” Camp Hill, PA: Andrews McMeel, 2008. 63. Quoted in Andrews McMeel, “Countdown to Victory.” 64. Quoted in Michael Crowley and Dan Goldman, 08: A Graphic Diary from the Campaign Trail. New York: Three Rivers , 2009, p. 40. 65. Quoted in Susan Morrison, ed., Thirty Ways of Looking at Hillary. New York: HarperCollins, 2008, pp. 53–54.
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66. Quoted in Crowley and Goldman, 08, p.32. 67. Quoted in James Carville, 40 More Years: How the Democrats Will Rule the Next Generation. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2009, p. 147. 68. Quoted in Joshua Green, “The Front Runner’s Fall,” Atlantic, September 2008, wwwtheatlantic.com/doc200809/hillaryclinton-campaign. 69. Quoted in Kurt Soller, “Not So Ordinary People,” Newsweek, January 5, 2009, p. 21. 70. Quoted in Crowley and Goldman, 08, pp. 77–78. 71. Quoted in Crowley and Goldman, 08, p. 54. 72. Quoted in Green, “The Front Runner’s Fall.” 73. Hillary Clinton, interview by George Stephanopoulos, This Week with George Stephanopoulos, ABC, June 7, 2009, http:// abcnews.go.com/ThisWeek/Politics/story?id=7775502&page=1. 74. Carville, 40 More Years, p. 71. Chapter 7: Madam Secretary 75. Quoted in Sky News, “Obama Confirms Hillary in Top Job,” Sky News, December 1, 2008, http://news.sky.com/skynews/ Home/World-News/Barack-Obama-Makes-Hillary-ClintonSecretary-Of-State-And-Unveils-DefenceTeam/Article/200812 115168344. 76. Hillary Clinton, interview by George Stephanopoulos, This Week with George Stephanopoulos, ABC, June 7, 2009, http:// abcnews.go.com/ThisWeek/Politics/story?id=7775502&page=1. 77. Quoted in Michael Crowley, “Hillary’s State: Huge Expectations, Big Egos, Turf Wars: Is Clinton’s State Department Just Like Her Campaign?” New Republic, March 4, 2009, www.tnr .com/politics/story.html?id=055ed693-c4c1-43dc-8a3a-2bea bf6c6e62. 78. Quoted in Paul Richter, “World Breathes Sigh of Relief, Hillary Clinton Says,” Los Angeles Times, January 28, 2009, http://articles.latimes.com/2009/jan/28/world/fg-clinton28. 79. Quoted in Mark Landler, “Clinton Warns N. Korea on Missiles,” New York Times, February 16, 2009, p. A13. 80. Quoted in Mark Landler, “Clinton Praises Indonesian Democracy,” New York Times, February 18, 2009, p. A10.
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81. Hillary Rodham Clinton, “Working Toward Change in Perceptions of U.S. Engagement Around the World,” U.S. Department of State, February 20, 2009, http://www.state.gov/sec retary/rm/2009a/02/119430.htm. 82. Quoted in Mark Landler, “Lower Profile for Clinton, but Her Influence Rises,” New York Times, April 1, 2009, www.nytimes .com/2009/04/02/world/europe/02diplo.html?_r=1. 83. Quoted in Mark Landler, “Clinton Scores Points by Admitting Past U.S. Errors,” New York Times, April 18, 2009, www.nytimes.com/2009/04/18/world/americas/18diplo.html. 84. Quoted in David Stout, “Clinton Delivers Rebuke to Pakistan,” New York Times, April 23, 2009, www.nytimes.com/2009/ 04/23/us/politics/23clinton.html?_r=1. 85. Quoted in Mark Landler, “Cuba Agrees to U.S. Talks in New Sign of a Thaw,” New York Times, June 1, 2009, www.nytimes .com/2009/06/01/world/americas/01cuba.html. 86. Hillary Rodham Clinton, “Nomination Hearing to Be Secretary of State,” U.S. Department of State, February 13, 2009, www.state.gov/secretary/rm/2009a/01/115196.htm.
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Important Dates 1947 Hillary Diane Rodham is born October 26 in Chicago, Illinois. 1950 The Rodham family moves to the middle-class Chicago suburb of Park Ridge, where Hillary attends public school and church regularly. 1964 Rodham works on Republican senator Barry Goldwater’s presidential campaign. 1969 Rodham receives a bachelor of arts from Wellesley College with high honors. She is the first student in Wellesley history to give the commencement address. 1973 Rodham receives her law degree from Yale Law School. 1974 Rodham works for a firm doing research to impeach President Richard Nixon. 1975 Rodham marries William Jefferson Clinton on October 11. 1977 Clinton works for the Rose Law Firm. She is appointed chair of Legal Services Corporation by President Jimmy Carter. 1978 Clinton’s husband, Bill, is sworn in as governor of Arkansas. 1980 Daughter Chelsea Victoria is born February 27.
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1983 Bill is reelected governor of Arkansas and holds the office for the next ten years. Hillary Clinton is appointed head of the statewide Education Standards Committee. 1986 Clinton chairs the board of the Children’s Defense Fund through 1989. 1988 Clinton is named one of the top one hundred lawyers in America by National Law Journal. 1991 Following her husband’s announcement to run for president, Clinton campaigns tirelessly on his behalf. Clinton is again named one of the top one hundred lawyers in America by National Law Journal. 1993 Clinton becomes First Lady of the United States when her husband is sworn in as the forty-second president on January 20. She is named by President Clinton to chair the Task Force on National Health Care. Her father, Hugh Rodham, dies. Vince Foster commits suicide. 1994 Task Force culminates in watered-down Health Security Act. 1995 Clinton gives a speech before the United Nations World Conference on Women in Beijing, China. 1996 Bill Clinton wins reelection as president of the United States. It Takes a Village is published and becomes a best seller; the audio version wins a Grammy Award. 1998 Bill Clinton is impeached in the House for the Monica Lewinsky scandal.
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2000 Clinton is elected the first woman senator in the state of New York and is the first former First Lady to hold elected office. 2001 Clinton becomes the first New York senator to chair the Armed Services Committee. Terrorists attack the United States on September 11. 2003 Living History is published and becomes a best seller. 2006 Clinton wins a second term as New York senator by an overwhelming majority. 2007 Clinton announces her candidacy for president of the United States on January 20. 2008 Clinton suspends her presidential campaign in June and endorses Democratic front-runner Barack Obama for the general election. 2009 Clinton is approved by Congress to be President Obama’s secretary of state; Logs over 74,000 miles in first 100 days in office visiting Asia, the Middle East, Europe and Latin America; Helps bring Cuba into the OAS;. Fractures elbow slipping in garage in Washington but continues working from her hospital bed
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For More Information Books Dennis Abrams, Hillary Rodham Clinton: Politician. New York: Chelsea House, 2009. This is a young adult biography in the Women of Achievement series that focuses on famous women. It includes information about the 2008 presidential election. Madeleine Albright, Madam Secretary: A Memoir. New York: Miramax, 2003. This autobiography of the first female secretary of state includes several anecdotes that praise the work of Hillary Clinton. Ned Bailey and Ryan Howe, Female Force: Hillary Clinton. Bellingham, WA: Blue Water Comics, 2009. This is a glossy comic book in a biography series that focuses on American female political figures. Ann Bausum, Our Country’s Presidents. Washington, DC: National Geographic Society, 2001. Colorful graphics highlight this factladen book about the history of the American presidency. Each president is described in a short profile. P. F. Bentley, Clinton: Portrait of a Victory. New York: Warner, 1993. This is a book of photo essays on Bill Clinton’s 1992 presidential campaign. It is highlighted by many images of Hillary and Bill on the campaign trail as well as occasional personal moments of candor. Michael Burgan, Hillary Rodham Clinton: First Lady and Senator. Mankato, MN: Compass Point, 2008. This book discusses Hillary Clinton’s personal and political life and includes photos, a bibliography, a glossary, and several time lines. James Carville, 40 More Years: How the Democrats Will Rule the Next Generation. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2009. Written by former president Bill Clinton’s chief campaign adviser, this book discusses how the Democrats will remain in power, with a separate chapter on Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign. Bill Clinton, My Life. New York: Knopf, 2004. This is an autobiography of the former president that includes many anecdotes and observations of Hillary Rodham Clinton.
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Hillary Rodham Clinton, An Invitation to the White House. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2000. This book offers many impressive photographs accompanied by text that details the history of the White House, as well as events, projects, and anecdotes from the eight years the Clintons lived there. ————, It Takes a Village: And Other Lessons Children Teach Us. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1996. Hillary Clinton discusses her lifelong dedication to children, using personal anecdotes and statistics that highlight how the plight of children can be improved. ————, Living History. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2003. Hillary Clinton’s autobiography is both candid and thought provoking. ————, Remarks and Commentary by First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton: Vital Voices, 1997–1999. Washington, DC: Executive Office of the President, 1999. This is a collection of speeches made by Hillary Clinton in the three years she was involved in the Vital Voices project dedicated to helping women in the world. Michael Crowley and Dan Goldman, 08: A Graphic Diary from the Campaign Trail. New York: Three Rivers, 2009. This is a comic book that depicts the highlights of the 2008 presidential election. Susan Estrich, The Case for Hillary Clinton. New York: HarperCollins, 2005. Published in 2005, this is an in-depth analysis of why Hillary Clinton should run for president. It includes two bibliographies and several statistical charts. JoAnn Bren Guernsey, Hillary Rodham Clinton: Secretary of State. Minneapolis: Twenty-First Century, 2009. This is an updated portrait of the secretary of state that includes select photos, notes, further reading suggestions, and a Web site list. Jim Gullo, The Importance of Hillary Rodham Clinton. Detroit: Lucent, 2004. This is a biography of Hillary Clinton that emphasizes her importance in history with text, photos, a time line, and a bibliography. Patrick S. Halley, On the Road with Hillary. New York: Viking, 2002. This is the author’s first-person account of working for and with Hillary Clinton. It includes personal photos.
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Beth J. Harpaz, The Girls in the Van: Covering Hillary. New York: St. Martin’s, 2001. Modeled after the book The Boys on the Bus, this is a detailed account of how the author covered Hillary Clinton’s run for the U.S. Senate in New York. Kathleen Krull and Amy June Bates, Hillary Rodham Clinton: Dreams Taking Flight. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2008. This is an illustrated children’s book with a wealth of facts about Hillary Clinton, from the time she wanted to be an astronaut up to her run for the presidency. Kati Marton, Hidden Power: Presidential Marriages That Shaped Our Recent History. New York: Random House, 2001. This is an analysis of ten presidential marriages that shaped America’s recent history. It includes a chapter on the Clintons. S. Michele Nix, ed., Women at the Podium. New York: HarperCollins, 2000. This is a collection of memorable speeches given by prominent women from ancient Rome to today. The text is divided into sections based on subject and includes Hillary Clinton’s speech in honor of the anniversary of the first women’s rights convention. Eleanor Roosevelt, The Autobiography of Eleanor Roosevelt. New York: Da Capo, 1992. This is a collection of Roosevelt’s four separate memoirs combined into one volume. It is an insightful story of the events and accomplishments of the woman Hillary Clinton admires most. Bernard Ryan Jr., Hillary Rodham Clinton: First Lady and Senator. New York: Ferguson, 2004. Written for young adults, this book discusses Hillary Clinton’s life and work from childhood through her time in the Senate. Gail Sheehy, Hillary’s Choice. New York: Random House, 1999. This is a biography of Hillary Clinton that was published while she was First Lady. George Stephanopoulos, All Too Human: A Political Education. New York: Little, Brown, 1999. This is the author’s firsthand account of working on Bill Clinton’s presidential campaign and then in his administration. Contains many details and anecdotes concerning Hillary Clinton. Kathleen Tracy, The Clinton View: The Historic Fight for the 2008 Democratic Nomination. Hockessin, DE: Mitchell Lane, 2009.
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The focus of this book is on the battle between Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama during the 2008 presidential campaign. Michael V. Uschan, People in the News: Barack Obama. Detroit: Lucent, 2009. This is an up-to-date biography of the forty-fourth president who overtook Hillary Clinton in the 2008 election and chose her to be his secretary of state. David Wallechinsky, Tyrants: The World’s 20 Worst Living Dictators. New York: HarperCollins, 2006. Each of the twenty chapters in this book describes the lives, crimes, and geopolitical backgrounds of the tyrannical world leaders Hillary Clinton deals with as secretary of state. Catherine Whitney, Nine and Counting: The Women of the Senate. New York: HarperCollins, 2001. This is a collection of essays celebrating the women of the U.S. Senate and includes a chapter written by Hillary Clinton. Periodicals Jonathan Alter, “Hillary’s Battle Plan,” Newsweek, November 27, 2006. ————, “Is America Ready?” Newsweek, January 1, 2007. Carl Sferrazza Anthony, “Hillary Clinton: ‘What I Hope to Do as First Lady,’” Good Housekeeping, January 1993. Molly Ball, “Candidates Pitch Their Cure,” Las Vegas Review-Journal, March 25, 2007. Michael Barbaro, “As a Director, Clinton Moved Wal-Mart Board, but Only So Far,” New York Times, May 20, 2007. Meredith Berkman, “Hillary Now,” Ladies’ Home Journal, June 2000. Margaret Carlson, “All Eyes on Hillary,” Time, September 14, 1992. James Carville and Mark J. Penn, “The Power of Hillary,” Washington Post, July 2, 2006. Howard G. Chua-Eoan, Nina Burleigh, and Linda Kramer, “Power Mom,” People, January 25, 1993. Eleanor Clift, “I Think We’re Ready,” Newsweek, February 3, 1992. Jonathan Darman, “His New Role,” Newsweek, May 28, 2007. Michael Finnegan, “Giuliani and Clinton Stay in the Lead,” Los Angeles Times, June 12, 2007. Dan Gilgoff, “Hillary’s Dilemma,” U.S. News & World Report, November 20, 2006.
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Jed Graham, “Sen. Clinton at Odds with Base over Her ‘02 Vote for Iraq War,” Investor’s Business Daily, February 16, 2007. Patrick Healy, “Clinton Camp Turns to a Star in Money Race,” New York Times, March 31, 2007. ————, “Mindful of Past, Clinton Cultivates the Military,” New York Times, March 27, 2007. Jack Hitt, “Harpy, Hero, Heretic, Hillary,” Mother Jones, January–February 2007. Landon Y. Jones, “Road Warriors,” People, July 2, 1992. Jill Lawrence, “Question for Hillary: What Will Bill’s Impact Be?” USA Today, March 29, 2007. ————, “Why Some Democrats Worry That Clinton Can’t Win,” USA Today, January 22, 2007. Rod McCullom, “Behind the Gay-Friendly Faces,” Advocate, April 10, 2007. Susannah Meadows, “What Are Hillary’s Religious Beliefs?” Newsweek, February 12, 2007. Dan Morain and Scott Braun, “Clinton Rakes in Early Money,” Los Angeles Times, April 2, 2007. John O’Neil, “Hillary Rodham Clinton: Seeking a Return to the White House,” New York Times, March 12, 2007. Susan Schindehette, “Hillary, Act II,” People, July 1, 2002. Gail Sheehy, “What Hillary Wants,” Vanity Fair, May 5, 1992. James B. Stewart, “On the Road to Scandal,” Time, March 18, 1996. Karen Tumulty, “The Better Half,” Time, December 28, 1998. ————, “Hillary: I Have to Earn Every Vote,” Time, February 1, 2007. ————, “Ready to Run,” Time, August 28, 2006. ————, “Turning Fifty,” Time, October 20, 1997. Jill Zuckman, “I Am Woman,” Chicago Tribune, March 6, 2007. DVDs Frontline: The Clinton Years. Directed by Brent E. Huffman and Katerina Monemvassitis. PBS Home Video, 2001. A PBS/ABC News special that explores the presidency of Bill Clinton and Hillary Clinton’s involvement in it. The Hunting of the President. Directed by Harry Thomason and
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Nickolas Perry. New York: 20th Century Fox Home Video, 2004. This documentary explores the many efforts made by enemies of the Clintons to disgrace them with scandals, first in Arkansas and later in the White House. The War Room. Directed by D.A. Pennebaker. Vidmark Entertainment, 1993. This Oscar-nominated documentary details Bill Clinton’s 1992 presidential campaign from the point of view of his chief strategists and Hillary Clinton. Internet Source Chris Smith, “The Woman in the Bubble,” New York, November 6, 2006, http://nymag.com/news/politics/23790. Web Sites Hillary Clinton Can (www.hillaryclintoncan.com). This site offers information about Hillary Clinton, including events, news, videos, Web articles, links, and photos. U.S. Department of State (www.state.gov/secretary). This is the official Web site of the State Department. It offers information on Secretary Clinton’s daily appointment schedules, photos, a time line and information on former secretaries of state. William J. Clinton Presidential Library (www.clintonlibrary.gov/ bios-HRC.html). The official Web site for President Clinton’s library includes a short biography of Hillary, research information, a virtual tour, and additional links for further information on Bill and Hillary Clinton. Women’s International Center (www.wic.org/bio/hclinton.htm). This Web site has honored women since the organization’s inception in 1985. Includes several links, such as a biography of Hillary Clinton.
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Index A Adams, Ruth, 20–21 Albright, Madeleine, 56 Arafat, Suha, 67 Arkansas Advocates for Children and Families, 6, 34 Arkansas Education Standards Committee, 40 Armed Services Committee, chair of, 72-73, 73, 74 B Barnett, Robert, 90 Bell, Terrence, 42 Beyond the Best Interests of the Child (Goldstein, Freud, and Solnit), 29 Biden, Joe, 79, 88 Bond, Christopher, 59 Braun, Carol Moseley, 85 Bush, George H.W., 44 Bush, George W., 76, 77, 78, 81 C Caraway, Hattie Wyatt, 85 Carpetbaggers, 65–66 Carter, Jimmy, 32, 34, 39 Carville, James, 91 Castro, Fidel, 104 Castro, Raúl, 81, 105 Catt, Carrie Chapman, 8 Children’s Defense Fund, 6, 24, 29, 43 Chisholm, Shirley, 85 Clift, Eleanor, 8, 37 Clinton, Bill, 16, 25–26, 27 allegations against, 55 as Arkansas attorney general, 32 campaign for Arkansas governor, 35–36
at campaign rally, 83 as governor of Arkansas, 36, 39, 40 with Hillary, 44 with Hillary and Chelsea, 38 impeachment of, 61–62 legacy of, 62 Monica Lewinsky and, 60 in 1992 presidential race, 43–44, 46 in 2007 presidential primary campaign, 82 Clinton, Chelsea Victoria, 38, 39, 43 birth of, 38 Clinton, Hillary Diane Rodham, 7, 15, 41, 50 achievements as First Lady, 62 as advocate for children in Arkansas, 40–42 allegations against, 55 announces candidacy for president, 77–78 announcing bid for New York senate seat, 65 announcing presidential candidacy on webcast, 78 Asian tour of, 99, 101–102 on avoiding Fidel Castro, 104 barriers broken by, 6–7 become head of Health Care Task Force, 49–50 being sworn in as secretary of state, 97 with Bill, 27, 30, 31, 44 with Bill and Cardinal Roger Mahoney, 16 with Bill and Chelsea, 38 in Bill’s campaign for Arkansas governor, 35–36 birth of, 11 on book promotion tour, 57
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campaign for NY senate seat, 64–71 at campaign rally, 83, 87, 91 on campaign trail in 1992 presidential race, 45 with candidates for presidential nomination, 79 as chair of Senate Armed Services Committee, 72–73 on Chelsea, 37 in debate with Rick Lazio, 68–69 in Democratic presidential primary debate, 81 early political activity of, 17 endorses Barack Obama, 90–91 as First Lady, 48 at G20 Summit, 102–105 Harriet Tubman speech of, 70 with her parents, 11 on her selection to be secretary of state, 93 in Honduras for OAS Summit, 106–108, 107 in Jakarta, Indonesia, 100 with Japan’s foreign minister, 98–99 in Jimmy Carter’s presidential campaign, 32–34 joins Bill in Arkansas, 30–31 as junior senator from NY, 71, 73–74 Lewinsky scandal and, 60 on Pakistan, 106 personal likes/dislikes of, 94 with President Obama, 93, 96-97, 103 reelection to senate, 76 as secretary of state, 95–99 as staff member on Watergate committee, 28, 29 as student at Wellesley College, 19, 19–21 in testimony before Congress, 53, 53–54
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wins New Hampshire primary, 86–87 work with Children’s Defense Fund, 6, 24, 29 at Yale Law School, 22–25 on young women getting into politics, 8 Clinton, Roger, 26 Clinton, Virginia, 28 Cuba, 106–108 U.S. embargo on, 105 D Dean, Howard, 80 Democratic primary elections (2007), 79, 80 Iowa Caucus, 84, 86 New Hampshire, 86–87 problems with Florida/Michigan in, 90 Super Tuesday, 88 Dionne, E.J., Jr., 84 Dodd, Chris, 79, 88 Doyle, Patti Solis, 88, 89, 89 E Edelman, Marian Wright, 23, 23, 29 Edwards, John, 79, 83, 88 F Fernandez, Idy, 89 Ferraro, Geraldine, 85 Filegate, 55 40 More Years (Carville), 91 Foster, Vince, 51–52 Freud, Anna, 29 Frist, Bill, 75 G Gates, Robert, 92 Gingrich, Newt, 59, 75 Giuliani, Rudy, 64, 66, 67–68, 74, 80
Goldstein, Joseph, 29 Goldwater, Barry, 17 Gravel, Mike, 79 Grammy Award for Best Spoken Word Recording, 59 H Hagal, Chuck, 92 Halley, Patrick, 75 Hammerschmidt, John Paul, 31 Harpaz, Beth, 70 Health Care Task Force, 49 Health Security Act (1994), 54 Hidden Power (Marton), 47 Hispanic Magazine, 89 Holbrooke, Richard C., 96, 103–105 Home Instruction Program for Preschool Youngsters, 42 Hu Jintao, 103 I Ickes, Harold, 64 Internet, 80 Iraq War, 82 It Takes a Village (Hillary Clinton), 7, 59 on her advocacy for children, 14 J Jefferson, Thomas, 95 Johnson, Samuel, 54 Jones, Don, 16–17 Jones, James, 92 K Kennedy, John F., 17, 105 Kerry, John, 92 Kiley, Kevin, 73 Kim Jong-il, 101 King, Martin Luther, Jr., 17, 20 Kissinger, Henry, 95 Koop, C. Everett, 52
Kucinich, Dennis, 79 L Lazio, Rick, 68, 68, 70 Legal Services Corporation, 34 Lewinsky, Monica, 60 Life (magazine), 21 Living History (Hillary Clinton), 13 M Mahony, Roger, 16 Mandela, Nelson, 104 Marton, Kati, 47 McCain, John, 80, 88 McDougal, Jim, 59 McGovern, George, working on the campaign of, 27 McRae, Tom, 43 Media, 49, 87–88 Mitchell, George, 96 Moynihan, Daniel Patrick, 63, 65 N Nakasone, Hirofumi, 99 National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), 13 National Public Radio, 87–88 Newsweek (magazine), 7–8, 37 1950s, world of, 12 Nixon, Richard, 29 North Korea, 99, 101 O Obama, Barack, 79 with Hillary Clinton, 93, 103 in presidential primary debates, 81–82, 82–83 primary campaign of, 84 selects Hillary for secretary of state, 92–93 wins Iowa caucus, 86 wins South Carolina primary, 88
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working relationship with Hillary, 96–97 Office of Independent Counsel (OIC), 59, 60 On the Road with Hillary (Halley), 75 Organization of American States (OAS) Summit (2009), 106–107 P Pakistan, 105–106 Pelosi, Nancy, 85 Penn, Mark, 90 Perot, Ross, 44 R Rankin, Jeanette, 85 Republican primary elections (2007), 80 Rice, Condoleezza, 95 Richardson, Bill, 79, 88 Rodham, Dorothy Emma Howell (mother), 9–10, 10, 10–11, 11, 21 on values she taught to Hillary, 12, 13 Rodham, Hugh (father), 10–11, 11, 21 suffers stroke, 51 Rodham, Hugh, Jr. (brother), 11 Rodham, Tony (brother), 11, 14 Romney, Mitt, 80 Roosevelt, Eleanor, 56, 58 Roosevelt, Franklin D., 58 Rose Law Firm, 33, 34 Rural Health Advisory Committee, 37 S Schumer, Chuck, 67, 74 September 11 attacks (2001), 74 Smith, Margaret Chase, 85
126 Hillary Clinton
Solit, Albert J., 29 Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 85 Starr, Ken, 60 State Department, U.S., 95 Steinberg, Jim, 96 Stephanopoulos, George, 60 T Travelgate, 55 Tribou, George, 64 Tripp, Linda, 60 Troopergate, 55 U United Nations Conference on Women (Beijing, 1995), 56 University of Arkansas School of Law, teaching at, 30, 31 W Wall Street Journal (newspaper), 90 Wallace, Mike, 58 Washington Post (newspaper), 84, 90 Wellesley College, 19-20, 21 Wesley, John, 14 White House press corps, Hillary’s conflicts with, 49 Whitewater, 58–60 Williams, Maggie, 88 Women, as political pioneers, 85 Woodhull, Victoria, 85 Woodward, Bob, 52 Y Yale Law School, 22–28 Yale Review of Law and Social Action, 23 Young Republicans, 20
Picture Credits Cover: Scott Olson/Getty Images AP Images, 11, 23, 27, 30, 31, 33, 36, 38, 41, 44, 48, 53, 57, 59, 61, 72-73, 79, 81, 83, 89, 91, 98-99, 100, 107 Lee Balterman/Time Life Pictures/Getty Images, 19 Brendan Hoffman/Getty Images, 7 Chris Hondros/Newsmakers/Getty Images, 10 Cynthia Johnson/Time Life Pictures/Getty Images, 15 Nicholas Kamm/AFP/Getty Images, 78 David Hume Kennerly/Getty Images, 28 Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images, 103 Scott Olson/Getty Images, 93 © Reuters/Corbis, 50, 65, 68-69 Justin Sullivan/Getty Images, 87 Diane Walker/Time Life Pictures/Getty images, 16, 66 Alex Wong/Getty Images, 97
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About the Author Dwayne Epstein was born in Brooklyn, New York, and grew up in Southern California. He is a regular contributor to several film magazines and is the author of several children’s books, including Adam Sandler, Will Ferrell, Hilary Swank, Nancy Pelosi, and Denzel Washington for Lucent Books’ People in the News series. He is also the author of Lawmen of the Old West for Lucent’s History Makers series. Epstein lives in Long Beach, California, with his girlfriend, Barbara, and too many books about movie history.
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